Experiments show impact on willpower, physical strength
The mere act of kindness, or one of evil, can boost willpower and physical strength, a new study suggests.
The results, based on three experiments, show that those who performed good deeds, or envisioned themselves acting charitably, were able to hold a weight or squeeze a hand grip significantly longer than those who didn't perform or think about such deeds.
But evil acts appeared to confer similar and perhaps even greater superpowers.
"When you think of superheroes or super villains, [you think of people] that can possess huge amounts of willpower and are relatively unfazed by pain," said study researcher Kurt Gray, a doctoral student in psychology at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. "And because of your stereotype of heroes and villains, you kind of embody that, or transform yourself into your perception of hero and villain," when you perform good or evil acts , he said.
Weight lifting
In one experiment, 91 volunteers were asked to hold a five-pound (about 2.3-kilogram) weight for as long as they could, and then given $1 for their efforts. About half were asked if they would like to donate their dollar to the United Nations International Children's Fund, or UNICEF. Everyone in this group agreed to donate, while those not asked of course didn't donate.
In one experiment, 91 volunteers were asked to hold a five-pound (about 2.3-kilogram) weight for as long as they could, and then given $1 for their efforts. About half were asked if they would like to donate their dollar to the United Nations International Children's Fund, or UNICEF. Everyone in this group agreed to donate, while those not asked of course didn't donate.
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All
participants were then asked to hold the weight a second time. Those
who had donated
to charity were able to hold the weight for an average of 53
seconds, or 7 seconds longer than those who did not donate.
In a second experiment
with 151 volunteers, participants held the weight while they wrote a
fictional story featuring themselves either helping, harming or not
causing impact on another person.
Those who wrote about helping someone were able to
hold the weight 5 seconds longer than those who wrote about a neutral
interaction. Envisioning evil acts seemed to confer even more strength —
those who thought about harming someone else held the weight about 8
seconds longer.
The
boost in strength from evil might be because participants who thought
about hurting someone needed to first conquer their conscience telling
them that evil is wrong.
"Evildoers
have more [agency], because they need to overcome the voice of their
conscience to harm others. It takes even more agency to harm those
around you," Gray said. Agency refers to the ability to have
self-control, tenacity or strength.
Boosting willpowerThe
findings might have implications for all areas of life in which strength
or willpower is needed, Gray said.
"This suggests that the way to get more
willpower is to just do good or evil, hopefully good," Gray told
LiveScience. "So if you want to diet
better , maybe do good before you try to avoid that dessert."
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