Manipulating Belief in Free Will and Its Downstream Consequences: A Meta-Analysis.
Oliver GenschowEmiel CraccoJana SchneiderJohn ProtzkoDavid WisniewskiMarcel BrassJonathan W SchoolerPublished in: Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc (2022)
Ever since some scientists and popular media put forward the idea that free will is an illusion, the question has risen what would happen if people stopped believing in free will. Psychological research has investigated this question by testing the consequences of experimentally weakening people's free will beliefs. The results of these investigations have been mixed, with successful experiments and unsuccessful replications. This raises two fundamental questions: Can free will beliefs be manipulated, and do such manipulations have downstream consequences? In a meta-analysis including 145 experiments (95 unpublished), we show that exposing individuals to anti-free will manipulations decreases belief in free will and increases belief in determinism. However, we could not find evidence for downstream consequences. Our findings have important theoretical implications for research on free will beliefs and contribute to the discussion of whether reducing people's belief in free will has societal consequences.
Keyphrases