A creative destruction approach to replication: Implicit work and sex morality across cultures

Open Access
Authors
  • W. Tierney
  • J. Hardy
  • C.R. Ebersole
  • D. Viganola
  • E.G. Clemente
  • M. Gordon
  • S. Hoogeveen ORCID logo
  • J. Haaf ORCID logo
  • A. Dreber
  • M. Johannesson
  • T. Pfeiffer
  • J.L. Huang
  • L.A. Vaughn
  • K. DeMarree
  • E.R. Igou
  • H. Chapman
  • A. Gantman
  • M. Vanaman
  • J. Wylie
  • J. Storbeck
  • M.R. Andreychik
  • J. McPhetres
  • Culture & Work Morality Forecasting Collaboration
  • C. Brick ORCID logo
  • S.J. Geiger
  • M. Leib
  • V.S. Maas ORCID logo
  • E.L. Uhlmann
Publication date 03-2021
Journal Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Article number 104060
Volume | Issue number 93
Number of pages 18
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
How can we maximize what is learned from a replication study? In the creative destruction approach to replication, the original hypothesis is compared not only to the null hypothesis, but also to predictions derived from multiple alternative theoretical accounts of the phenomenon. To this end, new populations and measures are included in the design in addition to the original ones, to help determine which theory best accounts for the results across multiple key outcomes and contexts. The present pre-registered empirical project compared the Implicit Puritanism account of intuitive work and sex morality to theories positing regional, religious, and social class differences; explicit rather than implicit cultural differences in values; self-expression vs. survival values as a key cultural fault line; the general moralization of work; and false positive effects. Contradicting Implicit Puritanism's core theoretical claim of a distinct American work morality, a number of targeted findings replicated across multiple comparison cultures, whereas several failed to replicate in all samples and were identified as likely false positives. No support emerged for theories predicting regional variability and specific individual-differences moderators (religious affiliation, religiosity, and education level). Overall, the results provide evidence that work is intuitively moralized across cultures.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary material.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2020.104060
Downloads
1-s2.0-S0022103120304005-main (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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