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Moral vs Agentic Self-Superiority and Self-Esteem: The Role of Trait Properties Cover

Moral vs Agentic Self-Superiority and Self-Esteem: The Role of Trait Properties

Open Access
|Apr 2024

Abstract

People generally believe that they are better than others. This perceived self-superiority is stronger for moral (vs agentic) traits, whereas self-esteem mainly correlates with individual differences in agentic self-superiority beliefs. We replicated these seemingly contradictory findings within a single design in two studies that also examined the role of various properties of moral and agentic traits (controllability, verifiability, frequency of feedback, ambiguity, breadth, being typically human, taken-for-grantedness). The morality-agency difference in perceived self-superiority was partially mediated by the differential controllability, being typically human, and taken-for-grantedness of moral and agentic traits, but the lower verifiability of moral traits suppressed, rather than accounted for, the greater strength of moral self-superiority (Study 2). The stronger correlation between agentic self-superiority beliefs and self-esteem was moderated by differences between the traits’ controllability, verifiability, and being typically human (Study 2). Participants with low self-esteem showed self-superiority beliefs on morality traits only, whereas those with higher self-esteem also showed self-superiority beliefs on agentic traits (Studies 1–2). We discuss implications for a better understanding of the nature, causes, and correlates of perceived self-superiority.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/spo.72 | Journal eISSN: 2752-5341
Language: English
Submitted on: Dec 1, 2023
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Accepted on: Mar 25, 2024
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Published on: Apr 17, 2024
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2024 Yujing Liang, Aisha Dondeyne, Sara Hodges, Vera Hoorens, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.