A search for commonalities in defining the common good: Using folk theories to unlock shared conceptions

Author:

Wheeler Melissa A.1ORCID,Wilson Samuel G.2ORCID,Baes Naomi23ORCID,Demsar Vlad2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Business and Law RMIT University Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. Department of Management and Marketing Swinburne University of Technology Melbourne Victoria Australia

3. Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences The University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractThroughout the course of scholarly history, some concepts have been notoriously hard to define. The ‘common good’ is one such concept. While the common good has a long and contested scholarly history, social psychology research on folk theories – lay beliefs that represent an individual's informal and subjective understanding of the world – may provide a key for unlocking this nebulous concept. In the current paper, we analysed lay definitions of the common good using the linguistic inquiry and word count's meaning extraction method. From a nationally representative Australian sample of open‐ended text responses (n = 14,303), we uncovered a consistent conceptual structure, with nine themes corresponding to three core aspects: (i) outcomes and objects, (ii) principles and processes and (iii) stakeholders and beneficiaries. From this, we developed a working definition of the folk concept of the common good: ‘achieving the best possible outcome for the largest number of people, which is underpinned by decision‐making that is ethically and morally sound and varies by the context in which the decisions are made’. A working definition benefits the academic community and society more broadly, particularly when diverse stakeholders come together to act for the common good to address shared challenges.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

Reference77 articles.

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