Intrinsic religiosity attenuates the negative relationship between social disconnectedness and meaning in life
Intrinsic religiosity attenuates the negative relationship between social disconnectedness and meaning in life
Positive social connections are integral to people’s experience of meaning in their lives. As such, social isolation can make life seem meaningless. Chan, Michalak, and Ybarra (2019, Journal of Personality) provided evidence that religious beliefs (not just participation in corporate religious life) can provide an alternative source of meaning for people who feel socially isolated. We tested whether this phenomenon was specific to (a) intrinsic versus extrinsic orientations toward religion and (b) experiencing meaning in one’s life at present versus actively searching for meaning. In a sample of undergraduates, high levels of intrinsic—but not extrinsic—religiosity attenuated the relationship between social disconnection and decreased meaning in life. Moreover, this attenuation was specific to felt presence of meaning in life, rather than active search for meaning. These results corroborate and expand Chan et al.’s findings and suggest that future research should explore mechanisms by which religious beliefs themselves serve meaning-making functions.
Reynolds, Caleb J.
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Smith, Spencer M.
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Conway, Paul
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4 July 2020
Reynolds, Caleb J.
c8ea5d23-9002-4b25-b077-ffeedfe9ffd3
Smith, Spencer M.
75f0b0e9-7ebf-458b-9b7a-812c5205c9e8
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Reynolds, Caleb J., Smith, Spencer M. and Conway, Paul
(2020)
Intrinsic religiosity attenuates the negative relationship between social disconnectedness and meaning in life.
Psychology of Religion and Spirituality.
(doi:10.1037/rel0000318).
Abstract
Positive social connections are integral to people’s experience of meaning in their lives. As such, social isolation can make life seem meaningless. Chan, Michalak, and Ybarra (2019, Journal of Personality) provided evidence that religious beliefs (not just participation in corporate religious life) can provide an alternative source of meaning for people who feel socially isolated. We tested whether this phenomenon was specific to (a) intrinsic versus extrinsic orientations toward religion and (b) experiencing meaning in one’s life at present versus actively searching for meaning. In a sample of undergraduates, high levels of intrinsic—but not extrinsic—religiosity attenuated the relationship between social disconnection and decreased meaning in life. Moreover, this attenuation was specific to felt presence of meaning in life, rather than active search for meaning. These results corroborate and expand Chan et al.’s findings and suggest that future research should explore mechanisms by which religious beliefs themselves serve meaning-making functions.
Text
Reynolds et al, 2020, Intrinsic religiosity Attenuates Disconnection & Meaning, PsySpiRel-Preprint
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Published date: 4 July 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 472763
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472763
ISSN: 1941-1022
PURE UUID: ee48ccb0-fd6f-42b2-8032-ec162c6bb8a5
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Date deposited: 16 Dec 2022 18:05
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17
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Author:
Caleb J. Reynolds
Author:
Spencer M. Smith
Author:
Paul Conway
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