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Published byShanon Evans Modified over 8 years ago
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T HE S ELF -C ONSCIOUS E MOTIONS Shame, Guilt, Pride, & Embarrassment
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Moral Behavior Moral Standards Moral Reasoning Moral Emotions Moral Decisions Moral Behavior
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Moral Standards Moral Standards – Individuals’ knowledge of culturally defined moral norms and conventions Moral Reasoning Moral Reasoning – Involves thinking through the implications of alternative behaviors in terms of moral principles Moral Emotions Moral Emotions – Emotions associated with moral behavior
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Moral Behavior Self-Conscious Emotions Self-Conscious Emotions – Shame – Guilt – Pride – Embarrassment Other-Conscious Emotions Other-Conscious Emotions – Contempt – Disgust – Anger
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The Self-Conscious Emotions The S ELF must be included in SELF - CONSCIOUS EMOTIONS The SELF largely plays a cognitive role in relationship to the behavior of the self in society
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The Self-Conscious Emotions The S ELF is involved by… – Standards, Rules, & Goals – Evaluation of Self Internal vs. External Attributions Assessment of Success vs. Failure Global vs. Specific Self
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Shame The product of an individual's evaluation of their action in regard to the SRGs and their global evaluation of the self
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Guilt A product of an individual’s evaluation of their behavior as a failure
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Shame & Guilt Shame Associated with feelings about the self “I did the horrible thing” Guilt Associated with feelings about the behavior or event – “I did that horrible thing”
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Shame & Guilt SIMILAR Both are moral emotions Both are self-conscious Both occur in interpersonal settings Similar events give rise to both shame and guilt (critical is the individual differences in experiencing these) DISSIMILAR Shame is self-focused; guilt is behavior-focused Shame is more painful than guilt Shame makes people “feel small”; guilt makes people feel remorse Shame causes a concern about how others’ evaluate self; guilt causes concern about behavior’s effect on others
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Communicating Blame Moral emotions are responses to specific moral violation –(More on this later) Guilt and Shame are directed in different ways –Anger & Guilt direct attention to the behavior/event –Disgust and Shame direct attention to the self
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Communicating Blame
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Dealing with Guilt Guilt motivates people to experience pain Pain reduces the feeling of guilt
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Hubris a.k.a., Alpha Pride An exaggerated pride or self-confidence often resulting in retribution – A focus on the total self (as success) & requires a re-altering patterns of goal settings or evaluation of what constitutes success – Transient, but addictive – Interferes w/Interpersonal relationships
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Is Pride a “Social Sin”? Does pride interfere w/social relationships? Why or why not? What is the difference in the way pride was discussed in the article and the way we just discussed it? – What is the key difference described in the introduction of the article?
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Pride (Beta Pride) Results from the successful evaluation of a specific action
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Pride The expression in the upper panel was identified as pride by 89% of judges The expression in the lower panel was identified as pride by 87% of judges
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Self-Conscious Emotions SuccessFailure HubrisShame Global PrideGuilt Specific
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Embarrassment Embarrassment as “Shame-Light” – Some embarrassment comes in regards to negative evaluations (SRGs) that are not central to the self Embarrassment as Exposure: – Some situations elicit embarrassment w/o any negative evaluation
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