Project Details
Self-Enhancement and Religiosity
Applicant
Professor Dr. Jochen E. Gebauer
Subject Area
Personality Psychology, Clinical and Medical Psychology, Methodology
Social Psychology, Industrial and Organisational Psychology
Social Psychology, Industrial and Organisational Psychology
Term
from 2013 to 2018
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 235808290
Self-enhancement and religiosity are central human phenomena. But how are the two related? World religions describe self-enhancement as something irreligious. They believe that religiosity lets self-enhancement run dry. If this were the case, one would have to doubt the existence of a universal need for self-esteem, because self-enhancement is self-esteem's most reliable expression. Thus, the topic of self-enhancement and religiosity is relevant for the much-debated universality question surrounding self-esteem. The topic is also relevant for the validity of many self-theories, which are based on the assumption that self-esteem and self-enhancement are human universals. Additionally, the topic informs about the suitability of much-discussed techniques to quite self-enhancement permanently.Here, I apply for the first research program investigating the relation between self-enhancement and religiosity: (1) A meta-analysis will summarize existent indirect evidence in order to further validate the Self-Enhancement Increases Religiosity (SEIR) model. (2) Experimental analogs of the meta-analysis will test the causal assumptions of the SEIR model. (3) A three-wave longitudinal study will test for a complementary effect of religiosity on self-enhancement in the religious domain and this study will also seek to establish religious self-enhancement as a process explaining established religiosity effects.The present research is therefore relevant for the universality of self-enhancement and its implications. The present research is also relevant for a key question of the psychology of religion: Why does religiosity persist?
DFG Programme
Research Grants