How Everyday Counterfeit Behavior That Disrupts Self Authenticity Might Lead to Corruption Tendencies
In the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to this area by presenting a theoretical model for sequential behavior, placing counterfeit behavior (CB) as a predictor and corruption tendencies (proneness...
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Published in | Psychology research and behavior management Vol. 15; pp. 637 - 663 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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01.01.2022
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Abstract | In the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to this area by presenting a theoretical model for sequential behavior, placing counterfeit behavior (CB) as a predictor and corruption tendencies (proneness to moral emotions, ie, guilt and shame/GASP) as the criterion. In addition, two bridging variables are assigned, ie, inauthenticity/counterfeit self (CS) and moral disengagement (MD).
The research applied a correlational-predictive design and mediation analysis. Study 1 involved 978 participants of Indonesian nationality (380 males, 598 females;
= 23.64 years old,
= 4.35 years), and found that GASP was predicted by MD, and MD was predicted by CS. Study 2, which applied a between-subject design, showed that CS was predicted by four kinds of everyday counterfeit behavior (backstabbing, fake listening, plagiarism, and religious hypocrisy).
The hypotheses of Study 1 and Study 2 were confirmed by the data analysis. By integrating both studies, this study advocates the view of moral consistency through variable configuration (ie moral emotions, self and behavior authenticity, moral engagement) that composes corruption tendencies - which to the best of the author's knowledge, has not been proposed in other studies.
The novelty contained in the variable network is that counterfeiting, which is present in our daily life and considered to be ordinary and inevitable in the 4.0 Industry era, has a critical disrupting implication towards a person's morality. |
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AbstractList | Background: In the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to this area by presenting a theoretical model for sequential behavior, placing counterfeit behavior (CB) as a predictor and corruption tendencies (proneness to moral emotions, ie, guilt and shame/GASP) as the criterion. In addition, two bridging variables are assigned, ie, inauthenticity/counterfeit self (CS) and moral disengagement (MD). Methods: The research applied a correlational-predictive design and mediation analysis. Study 1 involved 978 participants of Indonesian nationality (380 males, 598 females; [M.sub.age] = 23.64 years old, [SD.sub.age] = 4.35 years), and found that GASP was predicted by MD, and MD was predicted by CS. Study 2, which applied a between-subject design, showed that CS was predicted by four kinds of everyday counterfeit behavior (backstabbing, fake listening, plagiarism, and religious hypocrisy). Results: The hypotheses of Study 1 and Study 2 were confirmed by the data analysis. By integrating both studies, this study advocates the view of moral consistency through variable configuration (ie moral emotions, self and behavior authenticity, moral engagement) that composes corruption tendencies--which to the best of the author's knowledge, has not been proposed in other studies. Conclusion: The novelty contained in the variable network is that counterfeiting, which is present in our daily life and considered to be ordinary and inevitable in the 4.0 Industry era, has a critical disrupting implication towards a person's morality. Keywords: psychology of corruption, corruptive tendency, inauthentic behavior, fake culture, counterfeit self, moral disengagement Juneman Abraham,1 Tommy Prayoga,2 Kharisma Murti,3 Afifah Azizah,4 Nathasya Shesilia Krishti,5 Sheila Putri Fajrianti,6 Bernadette Nathania Octaviana,7 Wing Ispurwanto,1 Rudi Hartono Manurung8 1Psychology Department, Faculty of Humanities, Bina Nusantara University, Jakarta, 11480, Indonesia; 2Content Collision, Jakarta, 11470, Indonesia; 3Indonesia’s Country Marketing Department, Carousell, Singapore, 139234, Singapore; 4GEO Business and Strategy Department, Whisper Media, Jakarta, 10270, Indonesia; 5Master’s Program in Adult Clinical Psychology, Atma Jaya Catholic University of Indonesia, Jakarta, 12930, Indonesia; 6Student Support Division, Multimedia Nusantara University, Banten, 15810, Indonesia; 7Group Instruction Department, Celebrity Fitness Indonesia, Jakarta, 12310, Indonesia; 8Japanese Department, Faculty of Humanities, Bina Nusantara University, Jakarta, 11480, IndonesiaCorrespondence: Juneman Abraham, Tel +62 21 5345830, Fax +62 21 53674042, Email juneman@binus.ac.idBackground: In the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to this area by presenting a theoretical model for sequential behavior, placing counterfeit behavior (CB) as a predictor and corruption tendencies (proneness to moral emotions, ie, guilt and shame/GASP) as the criterion. In addition, two bridging variables are assigned, ie, inauthenticity/counterfeit self (CS) and moral disengagement (MD).Methods: The research applied a correlational-predictive design and mediation analysis. Study 1 involved 978 participants of Indonesian nationality (380 males, 598 females; Mage = 23.64 years old, SDage = 4.35 years), and found that GASP was predicted by MD, and MD was predicted by CS. Study 2, which applied a between-subject design, showed that CS was predicted by four kinds of everyday counterfeit behavior (backstabbing, fake listening, plagiarism, and religious hypocrisy).Results: The hypotheses of Study 1 and Study 2 were confirmed by the data analysis. By integrating both studies, this study advocates the view of moral consistency through variable configuration (ie moral emotions, self and behavior authenticity, moral engagement) that composes corruption tendencies – which to the best of the author’s knowledge, has not been proposed in other studies.Conclusion: The novelty contained in the variable network is that counterfeiting, which is present in our daily life and considered to be ordinary and inevitable in the 4.0 Industry era, has a critical disrupting implication towards a person’s morality.Keywords: psychology of corruption, corruptive tendency, inauthentic behavior, fake culture, counterfeit self, moral disengagement In the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to this area by presenting a theoretical model for sequential behavior, placing counterfeit behavior (CB) as a predictor and corruption tendencies (proneness to moral emotions, ie, guilt and shame/GASP) as the criterion. In addition, two bridging variables are assigned, ie, inauthenticity/counterfeit self (CS) and moral disengagement (MD).BackgroundIn the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to this area by presenting a theoretical model for sequential behavior, placing counterfeit behavior (CB) as a predictor and corruption tendencies (proneness to moral emotions, ie, guilt and shame/GASP) as the criterion. In addition, two bridging variables are assigned, ie, inauthenticity/counterfeit self (CS) and moral disengagement (MD).The research applied a correlational-predictive design and mediation analysis. Study 1 involved 978 participants of Indonesian nationality (380 males, 598 females; M age = 23.64 years old, SD age = 4.35 years), and found that GASP was predicted by MD, and MD was predicted by CS. Study 2, which applied a between-subject design, showed that CS was predicted by four kinds of everyday counterfeit behavior (backstabbing, fake listening, plagiarism, and religious hypocrisy).MethodsThe research applied a correlational-predictive design and mediation analysis. Study 1 involved 978 participants of Indonesian nationality (380 males, 598 females; M age = 23.64 years old, SD age = 4.35 years), and found that GASP was predicted by MD, and MD was predicted by CS. Study 2, which applied a between-subject design, showed that CS was predicted by four kinds of everyday counterfeit behavior (backstabbing, fake listening, plagiarism, and religious hypocrisy).The hypotheses of Study 1 and Study 2 were confirmed by the data analysis. By integrating both studies, this study advocates the view of moral consistency through variable configuration (ie moral emotions, self and behavior authenticity, moral engagement) that composes corruption tendencies - which to the best of the author's knowledge, has not been proposed in other studies.ResultsThe hypotheses of Study 1 and Study 2 were confirmed by the data analysis. By integrating both studies, this study advocates the view of moral consistency through variable configuration (ie moral emotions, self and behavior authenticity, moral engagement) that composes corruption tendencies - which to the best of the author's knowledge, has not been proposed in other studies.The novelty contained in the variable network is that counterfeiting, which is present in our daily life and considered to be ordinary and inevitable in the 4.0 Industry era, has a critical disrupting implication towards a person's morality.ConclusionThe novelty contained in the variable network is that counterfeiting, which is present in our daily life and considered to be ordinary and inevitable in the 4.0 Industry era, has a critical disrupting implication towards a person's morality. In the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to this area by presenting a theoretical model for sequential behavior, placing counterfeit behavior (CB) as a predictor and corruption tendencies (proneness to moral emotions, ie, guilt and shame/GASP) as the criterion. In addition, two bridging variables are assigned, ie, inauthenticity/counterfeit self (CS) and moral disengagement (MD). The research applied a correlational-predictive design and mediation analysis. Study 1 involved 978 participants of Indonesian nationality (380 males, 598 females; = 23.64 years old, = 4.35 years), and found that GASP was predicted by MD, and MD was predicted by CS. Study 2, which applied a between-subject design, showed that CS was predicted by four kinds of everyday counterfeit behavior (backstabbing, fake listening, plagiarism, and religious hypocrisy). The hypotheses of Study 1 and Study 2 were confirmed by the data analysis. By integrating both studies, this study advocates the view of moral consistency through variable configuration (ie moral emotions, self and behavior authenticity, moral engagement) that composes corruption tendencies - which to the best of the author's knowledge, has not been proposed in other studies. The novelty contained in the variable network is that counterfeiting, which is present in our daily life and considered to be ordinary and inevitable in the 4.0 Industry era, has a critical disrupting implication towards a person's morality. |
Audience | Academic |
Author | Fajrianti, Sheila Putri Abraham, Juneman Murti, Kharisma Manurung, Rudi Hartono Prayoga, Tommy Octaviana, Bernadette Nathania Krishti, Nathasya Shesilia Ispurwanto, Wing Azizah, Afifah |
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Keywords | counterfeit self inauthentic behavior corruptive tendency fake culture moral disengagement psychology of corruption |
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Snippet | In the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to this area by... Background: In the field of moral psychology, researchers have strived to understand the complex dynamics of corruption psychology. This study contributes to... Juneman Abraham,1 Tommy Prayoga,2 Kharisma Murti,3 Afifah Azizah,4 Nathasya Shesilia Krishti,5 Sheila Putri Fajrianti,6 Bernadette Nathania Octaviana,7 Wing... |
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SubjectTerms | corruptive tendency counterfeit self fake culture inauthentic behavior Mediation moral disengagement Original Research psychology of corruption |
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Title | How Everyday Counterfeit Behavior That Disrupts Self Authenticity Might Lead to Corruption Tendencies |
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