Are you having trouble viewing this email? If so, click here to see it in a web browser. |
September 17, 2014 People Are More Selfish and Dishonest After Doing MathResearch participants who had spent 15 minutes solving math problems were 4 times more likely to lie for personal gain in an ethics game than those who had answered randomly selected verbal questions from a standardized test, says a team led by Long Wang of the City University of Hong Kong. The act of calculating appears to crowd out people's social and moral concerns, resulting in behavior that is more self-interested and even immoral. Stimuli such as family photos that prompt thoughts about social values appear to diminish these negative effects, the researchers say. SOURCE: The social and ethical consequences of a calculative mind-set |
FEATURED PRODUCTAligning Strategy and Sales |
FEATURED PRODUCTHBR Guide to Negotiating Ebook + Tools + Video |
Copyright © 2014 Harvard Business School Publishing, an affiliate of Harvard Business School. All rights reserved. Harvard Business Publishing 60 Harvard Way Boston, MA 02163 CUSTOMER SERVICE: 800-545-7685 (US/Canada) 1-617-783-7600 (outside the U.S. and Canada) |
No comments:
Post a Comment