Frontiers in Psychology (Jul 2019)

Believing in Karma: The Effect of Mortality Salience on Excessive Consumption

  • Siyun Chen,
  • Haiying Wei,
  • Lu Meng,
  • Yaxuan Ran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01519
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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This research proposes that mortality salience leads individuals to engage in differentiation of excessive consumption based on their appraisal of the karmic system. Study 1 demonstrated that mortality salience interacts with belief in karma to jointly determine excessive consumption, such that consumers faced with mortality salience tend to increase overconsumption likelihood when they have a weak (vs. strong) belief in karma. Study 2 revealed the underlying mechanism – temporal perspective – that drives our main effect. Replicating the findings of the two previous studies, study 3 further delineated benefit appeal as a theoretically derived boundary condition for the proposed interaction effect on excessiveness. Theoretical and, practical implications, as well as avenues for future research are discussed.

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