Mindfully outraged: Mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice
Mindfulness is known to temper negative reactions by both victims and perpetrators of injustice. Accordingly, critics claim that mindfulness numbs people to injustice, raising concerns about its moral implications. Exam-ining how mindful observers respond to third-party injustice, we integrate mindf...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-82742023-10-04T05:15:40Z Mindfully outraged: Mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice KAY, Adam A. MASTERS-WAAGE, Theodore Charles REB, Jochen VLACHOS, Pavlos A. Mindfulness is known to temper negative reactions by both victims and perpetrators of injustice. Accordingly, critics claim that mindfulness numbs people to injustice, raising concerns about its moral implications. Exam-ining how mindful observers respond to third-party injustice, we integrate mindfulness with deontic justice theory to propose that mindfulness does not numb but rather enlivens people to injustice committed by others against others. Results from three studies show that mindfulness heightens moral outrage in witnesses of injustice, particularly when the injustice is only moderate. Although these findings did not replicate with a mindfulness induction, post-hoc analysis in a fourth study reveals that measured state mindfulness perhaps heightens moral outrage when observers have a weak deontic justice orientation. In documenting this moral enlivening effect, we demonstrate that mindfulness - measured as a state or trait - leads people to exact greater deontic retribution against perpetrators of third-party injustice. 2023-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7275 info:doi/10.1016/j.obhdp.2023.104249 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/8274/viewcontent/MindfullyOutraged_sv.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Mindfulness Third -party justice Vicarious mistreatment Deontic justice Moral outrage Emotion regulation Self -transcendence Retribution Punishment Intuition Human Resources Management Organizational Behavior and Theory Social Psychology and Interaction |
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Mindfulness Third -party justice Vicarious mistreatment Deontic justice Moral outrage Emotion regulation Self -transcendence Retribution Punishment Intuition Human Resources Management Organizational Behavior and Theory Social Psychology and Interaction KAY, Adam A. MASTERS-WAAGE, Theodore Charles REB, Jochen VLACHOS, Pavlos A. Mindfully outraged: Mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice |
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Mindfulness is known to temper negative reactions by both victims and perpetrators of injustice. Accordingly, critics claim that mindfulness numbs people to injustice, raising concerns about its moral implications. Exam-ining how mindful observers respond to third-party injustice, we integrate mindfulness with deontic justice theory to propose that mindfulness does not numb but rather enlivens people to injustice committed by others against others. Results from three studies show that mindfulness heightens moral outrage in witnesses of injustice, particularly when the injustice is only moderate. Although these findings did not replicate with a mindfulness induction, post-hoc analysis in a fourth study reveals that measured state mindfulness perhaps heightens moral outrage when observers have a weak deontic justice orientation. In documenting this moral enlivening effect, we demonstrate that mindfulness - measured as a state or trait - leads people to exact greater deontic retribution against perpetrators of third-party injustice. |
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KAY, Adam A. MASTERS-WAAGE, Theodore Charles REB, Jochen VLACHOS, Pavlos A. |
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KAY, Adam A. MASTERS-WAAGE, Theodore Charles REB, Jochen VLACHOS, Pavlos A. |
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KAY, Adam A. |
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Mindfully outraged: Mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice |
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Mindfully outraged: Mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice |
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Mindfully outraged: Mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice |
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Mindfully outraged: Mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice |
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Mindfully outraged: Mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice |
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mindfully outraged: mindfulness increases deontic retribution for third-party injustice |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2023 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7275 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/8274/viewcontent/MindfullyOutraged_sv.pdf |
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