From the Grave to the Cradle: Evidence That Mortality Salience Engenders a Desire for Offspring.
2005
On the basis of terror management theory, the authors hypothesized that reminders of mortality (mortality
salience) should promote the desire for offspring to the extent that it does not conflict with other
self-relevant worldviews that also serve to manage existential concerns. In 3 studies, men, but not
women, desired more children after mortality salience compared with various control conditions. In
support of the authors’ hypothesis that women’s desire for offspring was inhibited as a function of
concerns about career success, Study 3 showed that career strivings moderated the effect of mortality
salience on a desire for offspring for female participants only; furthermore, Study 4 revealed that when
the compatibility of having children and a career was made salient, female participants responded to
mortality salience with an increased number of desired children. Taken together, the findings suggest that
a desire for offspring can function as a terror management defense mechanism.
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