TY - JOUR
T1 - The Wise Mind Balances the Abstract and the Concrete
AU - Grossmann, Igor
AU - Peetz, Johanna
AU - Dorfman, Anna
AU - Rotella, Amanda
AU - Buehler, Roger
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
PY - 2024/6/28
Y1 - 2024/6/28
N2 - We explored how individuals’ mental representations of complex and uncertain situations impact their ability to reason wisely. To this end, we introduce situated methods to capture abstract and concrete mental representations and the switching between them when reflecting on social challenges. Using these methods, we evaluated the alignment of abstractness and concreteness with four integral facets of wisdom: intellectual humility, open-mindedness, perspective-taking, and compromise-seeking. Data from North American and UK participants (N = 1,151) revealed that both abstract and concrete construals significantly contribute to wise reasoning, even when controlling for a host of relevant covariates and potential response bias. Natural language processing of unstructured texts among high (top 25%) and low (bottom 25%) wisdom participants corroborated these results: semantic networks of the high wisdom group reveal greater use of both abstract and concrete themes compared to the low wisdom group. Finally, employing a repeated strategy-choice method as an additional measure, our findings demonstrated that individuals who showed a greater balance and switching between these construal types exhibited higher wisdom. Our findings advance understanding of individual differences in mental representations and how construals shape reasoning across contexts in everyday life.
AB - We explored how individuals’ mental representations of complex and uncertain situations impact their ability to reason wisely. To this end, we introduce situated methods to capture abstract and concrete mental representations and the switching between them when reflecting on social challenges. Using these methods, we evaluated the alignment of abstractness and concreteness with four integral facets of wisdom: intellectual humility, open-mindedness, perspective-taking, and compromise-seeking. Data from North American and UK participants (N = 1,151) revealed that both abstract and concrete construals significantly contribute to wise reasoning, even when controlling for a host of relevant covariates and potential response bias. Natural language processing of unstructured texts among high (top 25%) and low (bottom 25%) wisdom participants corroborated these results: semantic networks of the high wisdom group reveal greater use of both abstract and concrete themes compared to the low wisdom group. Finally, employing a repeated strategy-choice method as an additional measure, our findings demonstrated that individuals who showed a greater balance and switching between these construal types exhibited higher wisdom. Our findings advance understanding of individual differences in mental representations and how construals shape reasoning across contexts in everyday life.
KW - construal
KW - measurement
KW - mental representations
KW - perspective-taking
KW - wisdom
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85201812593&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1162/opmi_a_00149
DO - 10.1162/opmi_a_00149
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C2 - 38974582
AN - SCOPUS:85201812593
SN - 2470-2986
VL - 8
SP - 826
EP - 858
JO - Open Mind
JF - Open Mind
ER -