Publications [#326605] of Walter Sinnott-Armstrong

Duke :: Philosophy :: Faculty :: Walter Sinnott-Armstrong

Papers Published

  1. Wright, JC; Nadelhoffer, T; Thomson Ross, L; Sinnott-Armstrong, W, Be it ever so humble: Proposing a dual-dimension account and measurement of humility, Self and Identity, vol. 17 no. 1 (January, 2018), pp. 92-125, Informa UK Limited.
    (last updated on 2024/04/23)

    Abstract:
    What does it mean to be humble? We argue that humility is an epistemically and ethically aligned state of awareness–the experience of ourselves as a small part of a larger universe and as one among a host of other morally relevant beings. So conceived, humility can be operationalized and measured along the dual dimensions of low self-focus and high other-focus and is distinct from other related constructs (e.g., modesty and open-mindedness). We discuss our newly developed scale (Study 1 and 2), and provide preliminary validation using self-report (Study 3) and behavioral measures (Study 4), showing that humility is related to people’s general ethical orientation (e.g., empathy, universalism/benevolence, and civic responsibility), their well-being (e.g., sense of autonomy, life-purpose, and secure attachment), mature religious beliefs/practices, and reactions to disagreement–specifically, people high in humility sat closer and less angled away from their conversation partner with whom they disagreed. Together, this provides support for our new Dual-Dimension Humility Scale.