Sabrina Blank’s research while affiliated with Hope College and other places

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Publications (1)


Is There a Dark Side to Humility? Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Evidence for Existential Costs of Humility
  • Article

December 2022

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74 Reads

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10 Citations

International Journal for the Psychology of Religion

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Matthew Severino

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Yuki Kojima

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[...]

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Sabrina Blank

Previous research has highlighted the benefits of holding one’s views with humility. However, might intellectual humility surrounding existential beliefs also incur some psychological costs? To advance research on intellectual humility about existential concerns (IH-E), we conducted four studies (N = 1,700) to examine potential costs of humility. Study 1 (N = 203) revealed that IH-E was associated with greater death-related anxiety. Study 2 (N = 1,151) replicated this association in a larger sample. In Study 3 (N = 77), a longitudinal study of first-year college students revealed that IH-E predicted negative changes in religious well-being three and six weeks later. In Study 4 (N = 269), a year-long longitudinal study of religious “ex-vangelicals” revealed that IH-E predicted religious disbelief and lower well-being one year later. We discuss implications for the nature and structure of security-providing worldviews. Despite the benefits of humility, holding existential beliefs humbly might come with intrapsychic costs.

Citations (1)


... In Study 2, we analyzed additional data from a community sample to test the same three hypotheses in Study 1. Namely, we examined associations of r/s struggles with variables of mental health (i.e., death anxiety) and well-being (i.e., meaning in life), identified latent profiles in the data, then tested whether these profiles would moderate associations between r/s struggles and distal variables of mental health and well-being in another sample. This study is a secondary data analysis of a data set with primary findings presented in Van Tongeren et al. (2023). ...

Reference:

Religious/Spiritual Struggles and Well-Being: Examining Latent Profiles of Existential Humility Across Two Studies
Is There a Dark Side to Humility? Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Evidence for Existential Costs of Humility
  • Citing Article
  • December 2022

International Journal for the Psychology of Religion