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Why and when suffering increases the perceived likelihood of fortuitous rewards
2020
British Journal of Social Psychology
Cultural practices and anecdotal accounts suggest that people expect suffering to lead to fortuitous rewards. To shed light on this illusory 'suffering-reward' association, we tested why and when this effect manifests. Across three vignette studies in which we manipulated the degree of suffering experienced by the protagonist, we tested a 'just-world maintenance' explanation (suffering deserves to be compensated) and a 'virtuous suffering' explanation (suffering indicates virtues, which will be
doi:10.1111/bjso.12406
pmid:32652578
fatcat:wp2qu2rn5za47ekfm4tx5ditga