Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology University of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA
2. Department of Sociology Kyung Hee University Yongin South Korea
3. Department of Psychology Rutgers University Newark New Jersey USA
4. Department of Psychology University of Wisconsin Madison Wisconsin USA
5. Department of Psychology University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA
Abstract
AbstractObjective/BackgroundConservative ideology, broadly speaking, has been widely linked to greater happiness and meaning in life. Is that true of all forms of a good life? We examined whether a psychologically rich life is associated with political orientation, system justification, and Protestant work ethic, independent of two other traditional forms of a good life: a happy life and a meaningful life.MethodParticipants completed a questionnaire that assessed conservative worldviews and three aspects of well‐being (N = 583 in Study 1; N = 348 in Study 2; N = 436 in Study 3; N = 1,217 in Study 4; N = 2,176 in Study 5; N = 516 in Study 6).ResultsHappiness was associated with political conservatism and system justification, and meaning in life was associated with Protestant work ethic. In contrast, zero‐order correlations showed that psychological richness was not associated with conservative worldviews. However, when happiness and meaning in life were included in multiple regression models, the nature of the association shifted: Psychological richness was consistently inversely associated with system justification and on average less political conservatism, suggesting that happiness and meaning in life were suppressor variables.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that happiness and meaning in life are associated with conservative ideology, whereas psychological richness is not.
Funder
Templeton World Charity Foundation