首页> 外文期刊>PLoS One >Having pity on our victims to save ourselves: Compassion reduces self-critical emotions and self-blame about past harmful behavior among those who highly identify with their past self
【24h】

Having pity on our victims to save ourselves: Compassion reduces self-critical emotions and self-blame about past harmful behavior among those who highly identify with their past self

机译:怜悯我们的受害者拯救自己:同情会降低自我批判的情绪和自我责任在那些高度认同他们过去自我的人中过去的有害行为

获取原文
       

摘要

Previous research has shown that people often separate the present self from past selves. Applying knowledge gained from intergroup research to the interpersonal domain, we argue that the degree to which people identify with their past self (self-identification) influences their reaction when recalling a past event during which they harmed another person. Because they feel close to their past self, we expected this to be threatening for high self-identifiers, and expected them to be motivated to avoid self-critical emotions and blame. Using four meta-analyses, conducted on a set of seven experimental studies, we investigated four ways in which high self-identifiers can distance themselves from the event: by feeling compassion, by taking a third-person rather than first-person perspective, by emphasizing ways in which their present self is different to their past self, and by disidentifying with the past self altogether. We found the strongest interaction effects for compassion: whereas a compassion manipulation increased self-critical emotions and self-blame about the past event for low self-identifiers, it decreased them for high self-identifiers. We argue that this occurs because the other-focused nature of compassion allows high self-identifiers subtly to shift the focus away from their harmful behavior. Our concept of past self-identification had stronger effects than a measure of self-continuity beliefs. It also correlated only moderately with the latter, suggesting they are distinct concepts. Our findings suggest that, ironically, the most effective way to protect the self against reminders of an undesirable past, may be to have compassion for our victims.
机译:以前的研究表明,人们经常将目前的自我与过去的自我分开。将从群体研究中获得的知识应用于人际关系,我们认为人们在过去的自我(自我识别)上识别的程度会影响他们的反应,当回顾过去的事件时,他们伤害了另一个人。因为他们感到靠近他们的过去的自我,我们预计这是为了威胁高自我识别者,并预计它们有动力,以避免自我关键的情绪和责任。使用四个荟萃分析,在一套七项实验研究中进行,我们调查了四种方式,其中高自我识别者可以从事件中远离活动:通过抚摸第三人而不是第一人称视角,通过强调他们现在的自我与他们过去自我不同的方式,并通过完全与过去的自我消除。我们为同情心发现了最强的互动效果:虽然同情操作增加了对低自我标识符的过去事件的自我关键情绪和自我责任,但它降低了高自我标识符。我们认为这是因为同情的其他聚焦性质允许高自我标识符巧妙地将焦点从有害行为转移。我们过去自我识别的概念比自我连续性信仰的衡量标准更强。它也只与后者适度相关,表明它们是截然不同的概念。我们的研究结果表明,讽刺意味着,讽刺意味的是,保护自我保护自我的最有效的方式,可能是一个不合需要的过去的提醒,可能是对我们受害者的同情。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号