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![]() Current Directions in Psychological ScienceVolume 10 Issue 6, Pages 194 - 197 Published Online: 12 Feb 2002 © 2009 Association for Psychological Science
Abstract | Full Text: PDF (Size: 56K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Forgiveness: Who Does It and How Do They Do It? Copyright 2001 American Psychological Society KEYWORDS forgiveness • research • review • personality • theory ABSTRACTForgiveness is a suite of prosocial motivational changes that occurs after a person has incurred a transgression. People who are inclined to forgive their transgressors tend to be more agreeable, more emotionally stable, and, some research suggests, more spiritually or religiously inclined than people who do not tend to forgive their transgressors. Several psychological processes appear to foster or inhibit forgiveness. These processes include empathy for the transgressor, generous attributions and appraisals regarding the transgression and transgressor, and rumination about the transgression. Interpreting these findings in light of modern trait theory would help to create a more unified understanding of how personality might influence forgiveness. |
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