Publication | Closed Access
The Effects of Perspective Taking on Motivations for Helping: Still No Evidence for Altruism
337
Citations
32
References
2002
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingPsychosocial DeterminantSocial PsychologyEmpathySocial InfluencePsychologySocial SciencesHelping RelationshipNegative AffectEthics Of LovePerspective TakingSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesMotivationAltruismApplied Social PsychologyEmotional IntelligenceMoral PsychologyEmpathic ConcernProsocial BehaviorEmotionTrue Altruism
To investigate the existence of true altruism, the authors assessed the link between empathic concern and helping by (a) employing an experimental perspective-taking paradigm used previously to demonstrate empathy-associated helping and (b) assessing the empathy-helping relationship while controlling for a range of relevant, well-measured nonaltruistic motivations. Consistent with previous research, the authors found a significant zero-order relationship between helping and empathic concern, the purported motivator of true altruism. This empathy-helping relationship disappeared, however, when nonaltruistic motivators (oneness and negative affect) were taken into account: Only the nonaltruistic factors of oneness (merged identity with the victim) and negative affect mediated helping, whereas empathic concern did not. Evidence for true altruism remains elusive.
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