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      Personal Uncertainty Strengthens Associations Between Scrupulosity and Both the Moral Appraisals of Intrusive Thoughts and Beliefs that God is Upset with Sins

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      Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
      Guilford Publications

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          God is watching you: priming God concepts increases prosocial behavior in an anonymous economic game.

          We present two studies aimed at resolving experimentally whether religion increases prosocial behavior in the anonymous dictator game. Subjects allocated more money to anonymous strangers when God concepts were implicitly activated than when neutral or no concepts were activated. This effect was at least as large as that obtained when concepts associated with secular moral institutions were primed. A trait measure of self-reported religiosity did not seem to be associated with prosocial behavior. We discuss different possible mechanisms that may underlie this effect, focusing on the hypotheses that the religious prime had an ideomotor effect on generosity or that it activated a felt presence of supernatural watchers. We then discuss implications for theories positing religion as a facilitator of the emergence of early large-scale societies of cooperators.
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            The intolerance of uncertainty construct in the context of anxiety disorders: theoretical and practical perspectives.

            Modern anxiety disorder models implicitly include intolerance of uncertainty (IU) as a critical component for the development and maintenance of these pervasive social and economic concerns. IU represents, at its core, fear of the unknown - a long-recognized, deep-seated fear identified in normative and pathological samples. Indeed, the intrinsic nature of IU can be argued as evolutionarily supported, a notion buttressed by initial biophysiological evidence from uncertainty-related research. Originally thought to be specific to generalized anxiety disorder, recent research has clearly demonstrated that IU is a broad transdiagnostic dispositional risk factor for the development and maintenance of clinically significant anxiety. The available evidence suggests that theorists, researchers and clinicians may benefit from explicitly incorporating IU into models, research designs, case conceptualizations and as a treatment target.
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              Making Sense of Life: The Existential Self Trying to Deal with Personal Uncertainty

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
                Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
                Guilford Publications
                0736-7236
                January 2014
                January 2014
                : 33
                : 1
                : 51-74
                Article
                10.1521/jscp.2014.33.1.51
                1139f5e3-c332-4bec-b158-63fe80034f5f
                © 2014
                History

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