Researchers and the general public hold differing views on the equivalence of self-control and willpower

Researchers and the general public hold differing views on the equivalence of self-control and willpower



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A scientific squabble⁤ over how⁤ to define ​self-control draws from ​an ‌unlikely source: A story from​ Greek mythology.
The science is clear. Proverbially tying oneself to the mast ⁢— or crafting strategies in advance to thwart temptation — is the optimal ‍way to meet one’s goals. But not all⁣ agree that such⁣ preemptive strategies constitute​ self-control.
Social psychologists say Odysseus⁤ utilized exemplary self-control. That’s because they‌ tend to distinguish between strategic self-control — that is, the⁣ Odysseus approach — and willpower. Willpower‌ would be akin to Odysseus resisting the Sirens’ ⁢call in​ the moment without rope and muscular ⁣crewmen.
Some social scientists, though, have started to push ‌back against that ‍linguistic split. Most laypeople use both willpower and self-control to refer to⁣ resisting ​temptation in the moment, says Chandra Sripada, a psychiatric neuroscientist‍ and ‌philosopher at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. As⁣ such, they view Odysseus’ decision to tie himself to​ the mast not as ‌an ‍act of self-control but an admission ⁢that he lacked it.

2024-01-03 ‍07:00:00
Original from www.sciencenews.org

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