Abundant literature in cognitive sciences has shown that morality is grounded in bodily experience. Four studies tested the perceptual association between the spatial dimension of straightness and the abstract concept of morality. Study 1 (n = 61) employed an IAT and revealed an association between straight figures and moral related words. Study 2 (n = 83) employed a similar paradigm and further revealed that the effect we found in Study 1 cannot be attributable to the general association between straight figures and positivity. Study 3 (n = 64) revealed that participants showed a stronger preference for straight figures after recalling moral (vs. immoral) deeds. Study 4 (n = 183) showed the specific role of morality, in this sense, as recalling sociable (vs. unsociable) deeds had no significant influence on figure preferences. A small‐scale meta‐analysis confirmed the robustness of our findings. Results are discussed in light of the embodiment theory

Pacilli, M., Pagliaro, S., Spaccatini, F., Giovanelli, I., Sacchi, S., Brambilla, M. (2018). Straight to heaven: Rectitude as spatial representation of morality. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 48(5), 663-672 [10.1002/ejsp.2358].

Straight to heaven: Rectitude as spatial representation of morality

Spaccatini, F;Sacchi, S;Brambilla, M.
2018

Abstract

Abundant literature in cognitive sciences has shown that morality is grounded in bodily experience. Four studies tested the perceptual association between the spatial dimension of straightness and the abstract concept of morality. Study 1 (n = 61) employed an IAT and revealed an association between straight figures and moral related words. Study 2 (n = 83) employed a similar paradigm and further revealed that the effect we found in Study 1 cannot be attributable to the general association between straight figures and positivity. Study 3 (n = 64) revealed that participants showed a stronger preference for straight figures after recalling moral (vs. immoral) deeds. Study 4 (n = 183) showed the specific role of morality, in this sense, as recalling sociable (vs. unsociable) deeds had no significant influence on figure preferences. A small‐scale meta‐analysis confirmed the robustness of our findings. Results are discussed in light of the embodiment theory
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Rectitude, Morality, Metaphors, Embodiment
English
2018
48
5
663
672
none
Pacilli, M., Pagliaro, S., Spaccatini, F., Giovanelli, I., Sacchi, S., Brambilla, M. (2018). Straight to heaven: Rectitude as spatial representation of morality. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 48(5), 663-672 [10.1002/ejsp.2358].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/175173
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