Authors
Edward Royzman, Pavel Atanasov, Justin F Landy, Amanda Parks, Andrew Gepty
Publication date
2014/10
Journal
Emotion
Volume
14
Issue
5
Pages
892
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
The CAD triad hypothesis (Rozin, Lowery, Imada, & Haidt, 1999) stipulates that, cross-culturally, people feel anger for violations of autonomy, contempt for violations of community, and disgust for violations of divinity. Although the disgust− divinity link has received some measure of empirical support, the results have been difficult to interpret in light of several conceptual and design flaws. Taking a revised methodological approach, including use of newly validated (Study 1), pathogen-free violations of the divinity code, we found (Study 2) little evidence of disgust-related phenomenology (nausea, gagging, loss of appetite) or action tendency (desire to move away), but much evidence of anger-linked desire to retaliate, as a major component of individuals’ projected response to “pure”(pathogen-free) violations of the divinity code. Study 3 replicated these results using faces in lieu of words as a dependent measure …
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