Title of article
Moral hypocrisy: impression management or self-deception?
Author/Authors
Lِnnqvist، نويسنده , , Jan-Erik and Irlenbusch، نويسنده , , Bernd and Walkowitz، نويسنده , , Gari، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
10
From page
53
To page
62
Abstract
In three studies (S1–S3; N = 256) we investigated whether moral hypocrisy (MH) is motivated by conscious impression management concerns or whether it is self-deceptive. In a dictator game, MH occurred both within participants (saying one thing, doing another; S1) and between participants (doing one thing when it is inconsequential, doing another thing when it affects payoffs; S2). People were willing to let an ostensibly fair coin determine payoffs only if they could fudge the results of the coin flip, suggesting that hypocrites do not deceive themselves (S3). Also supporting this view, MH was associated with adherence to Conformity values (S1–S2), indicative of a desire to appear moral in the eyes of others but not indicative of self-deception. Universalism values were predictive of moral integrity (S1, S3).
Keywords
Moral hypocrisy , impression management , conformity , Self-Deception , moral motivation , Personal values
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1961624
Link To Document