Free will, temptation, and self-control: we must believe in free will, we have no choice
Author: Wertenbroch, Klaus ; Vosgerau, Joachim ; Bruyneel, SabrinaINSEAD Area: MarketingIn: Journal of Consumer Psychology, vol. 18, no. 1, January 2008 Language: EnglishDescription: p. 27-33.Type of document: INSEAD ArticleNote: Please ask us for this itemAbstract: Baumeister, Sparks, Stillman, and Vohs (2007) sketch a theory of free will as the human ability to exert self-control. Self-control can produce goal-directed behavior, which free will conceptualized as random behavior cannot. We question whether consumer psychology can shed light on the ontological question of whether free will exists. We suggest that it is more fruitful for consumer psychology to examine consumers belief in free will. Specifically, we propose that this belief arises from consumers phenomenological experience of exercising self-control in the face of moral or intertemporal conflicts of will. Based on extant literature in philosophy, psychology, and economics, we offer both a narrower conceptualization of the nature of self-control problems and a more general conceptualization of self-control strategies, involving not only willpower but also precommitment. We conclude with a discussion of the consequences of consumers belief in free will.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Baumeister, Sparks, Stillman, and Vohs (2007) sketch a theory of free will as the human ability to exert self-control. Self-control can produce goal-directed behavior, which free will conceptualized as random behavior cannot. We question whether consumer psychology can shed light on the ontological question of whether free will exists. We suggest that it is more fruitful for consumer psychology to examine consumers belief in free will. Specifically, we propose that this belief arises from consumers phenomenological experience of exercising self-control in the face of moral or intertemporal conflicts of will. Based on extant literature in philosophy, psychology, and economics, we offer both a narrower conceptualization of the nature of self-control problems and a more general conceptualization of self-control strategies, involving not only willpower but also precommitment. We conclude with a discussion of the consequences of consumers belief in free will.
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