Title of article :
WHAT DEFINES THE GOOD PERSON?
Cross-Cultural Comparisons of Experts’ Models With Lay Prototypes
Author/Authors :
KYLE D. SMITH
SEYDA TURK SMITH، نويسنده , , John Chambers Christopher، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
“Good” is a fundamental concept present in all cultures, and experts in values and positive psychology
have mapped good’s many aspects in human beings. Which aspects do laypersons typically access and
consider as they make everyday judgments of goodness? Does the answer vary with culture? To address
these questions, the authors compiled prototypes of the good person from laypersons’ free-listings in
seven cultures and used experts’ classifications to content-analyze and compare the prototypes.
Benevolence, conformity, and traditionalism dominated the features that laypersons frequently attributed
to good people. Other features—competence in particular—varied widely in their accessibility
across cultures. These findings depart from those obtained in research using expert-designed self-report
inventories, highlighting the need to consider everyday accessibility when comparing cultures’ definitions
of the good person.
Keywords :
Content analysis , psychologicalwell-being , psychological realism , Positive Psychology , moral reasoning , Prototypes , Values
Journal title :
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology