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International Journal of Psychology & Behavior Analysis Volume 2 (2016), Article ID 2:IJPBA-112, 6 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2455-3867/2016/112
Research Article
Spiritual Transcendence, Mortality Salience and Consumer Behaviors: Is Spirituality Really Opposite to Materialism?

Magdalena Żemojtel-Piotrowska* and Jarosław Piotrowski

1Department of Psychology, University of Gdansk, Poland
2University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Poznan Campus, Poland
Dr. Magdalena Żemojtel-Piotrowska, Department of Psychology, University of Gdansk, Poland; E-mail: psymzp@ug.edu.pl
27 November 2015; 04 April 2016; 06 April 2016
Żemojtel-Piotrowska M, Piotrowski J (2016) Spiritual Transcendence, Mortality Salience and Consumer Behaviors: Is Spirituality Really Opposite to Materialism? Int J Psychol Behav Anal 2: 112. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2455-3867/2016/112

Abstract

In the current study (N = 161) we examined the effect of activation of spiritual transcendence and death anxiety on spending on hedonistic and status goods as expressing materialism. Additionally, the difference between the effects of spiritual transcendence in religious and non-religious form on consumer behaviors was examined. Basing on TMT assumption we expected increased spending on materialistic goods in the mortality salience condition. Spiritual transcendence, as logically opposite to materialism, was assumed to decrease levels of spending on materialistic goods. Finally, we examined whether spiritual transcendence, as related to transcending self (including own mortality) could serve as a buffer against death anxiety. We have found partial support for the assumption, that spiritual transcendence (only in non-religious form) indeed inhibits effects of mortality salience on higher spending on status goods.