Dimensions of wisdom perception across twelve countries on five continents.
Maksim RudnevH Clark BarrettW BuckwalterE MacheryS StichK BarrA BencherifaR F ClancyD L CroneY DeguchiE FabianoA D FodemanB GuennounJúlia HalamováT HashimotoJ HomanMartin KanovskýK KarasawaHackjin KimJordan KiperM LeeX LiuVeli MitovaR B NairL PantovicBrian C PorterP QuintanillaJ ReijerPedro P RomeroP SinghS TberD A WilkenfeldL YiIgor GrossmannPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Wisdom is the hallmark of social judgment, but how people across cultures recognize wisdom remains unclear-distinct philosophical traditions suggest different views of wisdom's cardinal features. We explore perception of wise minds across 16 socio-economically and culturally diverse convenience samples from 12 countries. Participants assessed wisdom exemplars, non-exemplars, and themselves on 19 socio-cognitive characteristics, subsequently rating targets' wisdom, knowledge, and understanding. Analyses reveal two positively related dimensions-Reflective Orientation and Socio-Emotional Awareness. These dimensions are consistent across the studied cultural regions and interact when informing wisdom ratings: wisest targets-as perceived by participants-score high on both dimensions, whereas the least wise are not reflective but moderately socio-emotional. Additionally, individuals view themselves as less reflective but more socio-emotionally aware than most wisdom exemplars. Our findings expand folk psychology and social judgment research beyond the Global North, showing how individuals perceive desirable cognitive and socio-emotional qualities, and contribute to an understanding of mind perception.