Authors
Nathan A Heflick, Jamie L Goldenberg, Joshua Hart, Siri‐Maria Kamp
Publication date
2015/3
Journal
European Journal of Social Psychology
Volume
45
Issue
2
Pages
267-275
Description
Belief in life after death offers potential comfort in the face of inevitable death. However, afterlife belief likely requires not only an awareness of death but also body–self dualism—the perception that the self (e.g., the mind) is distinct from the physical, undeniably mortal, body. In turn, we hypothesized that mortality salience (MS) should heighten afterlife belief only when dualism is facilitated. Study 1 found that MS increased belief for people high, relative to low, in trait mind–body dualism. In Study 2, MS only increased belief when people first wrote about their thoughts and personality, which a pilot study confirmed facilitated dualistic belief, relative to thinking about the physical self. Study 3 used the brain–computer interface technology to induce a dualistic experience: MS increased belief when participants accurately “typed” without the use of their external body (i.e., no hands). Together, these findings support the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
NA Heflick, JL Goldenberg, J Hart, SM Kamp - European Journal of Social Psychology, 2015