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Mind-body dualism and health revisited: how belief in dualism shapes health behavior

Mind-body dualism and health revisited: how belief in dualism shapes health behavior
Mind-body dualism and health revisited: how belief in dualism shapes health behavior
Does a sound mind require a sound body? Whether or not lay people subscribe to this notion depends on their belief in mind-body dualism and critically shapes their health-related behaviors. Six studies (N = 1,710) revisit the relation between dualism and health. We replicate the negative correlation between belief in dualism and health behavior (Study 1) and extend it to behavior in the field (Study 2). Studies 3a and 3b investigate how belief in dualism shapes intuitions about the material origin of psychological well-being, while Studies 4a and 4b examine how these intuitions determine health-related outcomes. In sum, construing minds as different from bodies entails the intuition that mental well-being has little material substrate which in turn attenuates health-sustaining behaviors.
1864-9335
219-230
Burgmer, Pascal
c8c43b56-572c-4242-800c-9f44ff648cec
Forstmann, Matthias
2e2c943b-1e0b-4711-af32-6b84d9b2c895
Burgmer, Pascal
c8c43b56-572c-4242-800c-9f44ff648cec
Forstmann, Matthias
2e2c943b-1e0b-4711-af32-6b84d9b2c895

Burgmer, Pascal and Forstmann, Matthias (2018) Mind-body dualism and health revisited: how belief in dualism shapes health behavior. Social Psychology, 49 (4), 219-230. (doi:10.1027/1864-9335/a000344).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Does a sound mind require a sound body? Whether or not lay people subscribe to this notion depends on their belief in mind-body dualism and critically shapes their health-related behaviors. Six studies (N = 1,710) revisit the relation between dualism and health. We replicate the negative correlation between belief in dualism and health behavior (Study 1) and extend it to behavior in the field (Study 2). Studies 3a and 3b investigate how belief in dualism shapes intuitions about the material origin of psychological well-being, while Studies 4a and 4b examine how these intuitions determine health-related outcomes. In sum, construing minds as different from bodies entails the intuition that mental well-being has little material substrate which in turn attenuates health-sustaining behaviors.

Text
Burgmer & Forstmann (2018, SoPsy) – Dualism & Health Revisited (Accepted Manuscript) - Accepted Manuscript
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 February 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 August 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478813
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478813
ISSN: 1864-9335
PURE UUID: 72cef1ce-31f1-4dbb-b650-ce89b26532b9

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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2023 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:16

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Contributors

Author: Pascal Burgmer
Author: Matthias Forstmann

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