http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2016-07/uoia-shw070516.php
Public Release: 5-Jul-2016
Study: How we explain things influences what we think is right
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
New research focuses on a fundamental human habit: When trying to explain something (why people give roses for Valentine's Day, for example), we often focus on the traits of the thing itself (roses are pretty) and not its context (advertisers promote roses). In a new study, researchers found that people who tend to focus on "inherent traits" and ignore context also are more likely to assume that the patterns they see around them are good.
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"The way we explain the world around us influences our beliefs about right and wrong," said University of Illinois graduate student Christina Tworek, who conducted the study with psychology professor Andrei Cimpian. "People have a strong tendency to think the status quo is good, so things that are outside the norm are viewed in a negative light," she said. "We wanted to understand how that happens. How do people go from what is to what ought to be?"
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"We found that adults and children who were most likely to explain by looking at the inherent features of the thing also were more likely to think, 'Yes, the way things are is good,'" Cimpian said.
When participants were exposed to information about external factors, they became more flexible in the way they thought about the status quo, Cimpian said.
For example, in one experiment, adults read statements about why paper money is rectangular ("a historical happenstance") or why people give flowers on Valentine's Day ("because of effective advertising and marketing by florists"). After reading such statements, participants "were less likely to think that the way things are is good, less likely to think that we should do things exactly the way we've been doing them," Cimpian said.
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