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    <title>Religious Convictions and Moral Motivation</title>    
    <link>https://fp.waik.stronazen.pl:443//3674-2501-09.html</link>    
    <description>Adherence to certain religious beliefs is often cited as both an efficient deterrent to immoral behavior and as an effective trigger of morally praiseworthy actions. I assume the truth of the externalist theory of motivation, emphasizing emotions as the most important non-cognitive elements that causally contribute to behavioral choices. While religious convictions may foster an array of complex emotions in a believer, three emotive states are singled out for a closer analysis: fear, guilt and gratitude. The results of recent empirical studies are examined to evaluate the relative motivational efficiency of all three emotions, as well as the likely negative psychological side-effects of these affective states, such as aggression and depression. While an action motivated by fear of punishment can be seen as a merely prudential strategy, the reparatory incentive of a guilty subject and a desire to reciprocate of the one blessed by undeserved favors are more plausible candidates for the class of genuine moral reactions. The available evidence, however, does not warrant a conclusion that a sense of guilt before God or as a sense of gratefulness to wards God, may produce a statistically significant increase in the frequency of prosocial actions aimed at other humans.  </description>
    <category domain="https://fp.waik.stronazen.pl:443//87-issues.html">Issues</category>
    <category domain="https://fp.waik.stronazen.pl:443//3661-2501.html">25/1 – Spring 2020</category>
    <category domain="https://fp.waik.stronazen.pl:443//3665-articles.html">Articles</category>    
    <language>fr</language>
    <pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2020 08:57:49 +0200</pubDate>
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