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Social science as dialogue: narcissism, individualist and collectivist values, and religious interest in iran and the united states

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Abstract

This investigation most importantly sought to illustrate the use of social science to promote cross-cultural dialogue. Fukuyama (1992) explained contemporary cultural trends in terms of a triumphant individualism that would overcome all other forms of social life, including what he described as the “fundamentalist resentment” of Iran. Lasch (1979) more pessimistically diagnosed Western social arrangements in terms of an emerging “culture of narcissism.” In this study, Iranian and American university students responded to measures of narcissism, individualist and collectivist values, religious interest, and psychological adjustment (identity, self-actualization, and self-consciousness). Variables related to a sense of community (collectivist values, religious interest, and identity) correlated negatively with narcissism in both societies, as did self-actualization. These data supported a moderate position between the polarized extremes of Fukuyama and Lasch and more importantly demonstrated how social scientific methods might be useful in creating a “space” for conducting a “dialogue between civilizations.”

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Ghorbani, N., Watson, P.J., Krauss, S.W. et al. Social science as dialogue: narcissism, individualist and collectivist values, and religious interest in iran and the united states. Curr Psychol 23, 111–123 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02903072

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