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posted by janrinok on Friday September 15 2023, @09:29PM   Printer-friendly
from the how-does-one-get-guilt-prone-people-into-power? dept.

People in power who are guilt-prone are less likely to be corrupt:

Guilt. It's a horrible feeling that causes us to question our worth as human beings. But while it's something that induces sleepless nights and stress-related physical symptoms in individuals, for society at large, the tendency toward guilt might have some benefits.

"People who are prone to feeling guilt in their everyday lives are less likely to take bribes," said UC Santa Barbara psychology professor Hongbo Yu, who specializes in how social emotions give rise to behaviors. He is a senior author of a paper that appears in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science.

In a study he conducted in collaboration with partners at East China Normal University and Zhejiang Normal University, Yu looked at guilt not as an episodic state — such as how we feel after specific instances in which we hurt someone — but rather as a personality trait, in which people tend to worry about the potential harm their actions cause.

"So I could be a person for whom it is really easy to feel guilt in my everyday life," he explained, "while others might be less likely to feel guilt, or have a higher bar for feeling that emotion."

We all can probably intuit that anticipatory guilt might make us think twice before undertaking an action with potentially bad consequences for others. But what has been less clear is how this crucial morality-related personality trait affects decision makers in situations involving temptation and incentives, balanced against potential harm to others.

[...] "You know someone's going to get hurt," Yu said. "In the paper we argue that when the victim is more salient, the association between the guilt trait and corrupt behavior becomes stronger." Concern for others' suffering, they said, might play a significant role in how guilt-proneness influences bribe-taking behaviors.

[...] Indeed, the researchers say, guilt proneness is not the only trait that might predict corrupt behaviors (or lack of them), and it's worth studying how this trait, along with other personality traits, might "serve as a reliable anti-corruption predictor in personnel selection," such as when choosing people for leadership positions or for high-stakes jobs.

"We can't claim causality, but we can leverage the association between the guilt trait and the lower likelihood of corruption to make us more confident about their integrity," Yu said. "Maybe that's something we can apply to the real world."

Journal Reference:
Hu, Y., Qiu, S., Wang, G., Liu, K., Li, W., Yu, H., & Zhou, X. (2023). Are Guilt-Prone Power-Holders Less Corrupt? Evidence From Two Online Experiments. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/19485506231168515


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by darkfeline on Saturday September 16 2023, @01:07AM (2 children)

    by darkfeline (1030) on Saturday September 16 2023, @01:07AM (#1324867) Homepage

    Guilt-prone? There's a word for that: conscience. I do believe people without a conscience are more likely to be corrupt.

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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by helel on Saturday September 16 2023, @04:39PM (1 child)

    by helel (2949) on Saturday September 16 2023, @04:39PM (#1324951)

    Conscience can guide you before you act. Guild is the feeling you get after. They are closely related but not identical.

    • (Score: 3, Interesting) by krishnoid on Saturday September 16 2023, @10:05PM

      by krishnoid (1156) on Saturday September 16 2023, @10:05PM (#1324980)

      Stretching an analogy for both of those, a good compass can tell you when you're pointed in the direction of North, or whatever your powerful magnetic (e.g., principled) reference is. Sometimes you'll drop it, sometimes you'll take your eyes off it, but when you look at it, you know whether you're oriented away, towards, or sideways from that direction. With an un/weakly-magnetized compass, you lean on other references (e.g., scripture and philosophy), other people (family, friends, YouTube people), or a combination (e.g., organized religion).

      If you don't lean on those things, other things will be your navigational aids through life, and in a land of opportunity, you can probably make the best of those. If you don't pick other navigational aids, you may seek pleasure or just go with whatever you desire [youtu.be] at the moment. Your other choice is to have a good compass, recognize your reference principles, and discard or selectively point away from some of them [youtu.be]. And there you have supervillains, some of which hide in plain sight.