Mapping the positive path to moral courage: Through belongingness, meaning in life, and moral disengagement

Numerous studies have explored the factors that influence moral cognition and morally desirable behavior. Yet, that remains doubtful whether the beneficial effects of psychological need satisfaction on individual and social functioning extend to moral processes. To bridge this gap, the current stud...

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Main Author: Muhammet Coşkun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Gökmen Arslan 2025-08-01
Series:Journal of Happiness and Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journalofhappinessandhealth.com/index.php/johah/article/view/109
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author Muhammet Coşkun
author_facet Muhammet Coşkun
author_sort Muhammet Coşkun
collection DOAJ
description Numerous studies have explored the factors that influence moral cognition and morally desirable behavior. Yet, that remains doubtful whether the beneficial effects of psychological need satisfaction on individual and social functioning extend to moral processes. To bridge this gap, the current study examined the psychological mechanisms through which a general sense of belongingness may foster morally courageous behavior, focusing on the mediating role of moral disengagement and the moderating role of meaning in life. A cross-sectional design was employed with 290 university students (68% women; Mean age= 22.18), who completed self-report measures assessing belongingness, meaning in life, moral disengagement, and moral courage. Results from a conditional process analysis indicated that moral disengagement had a mediating role in the association between belongingness and moral courage. Specifically, a higher sense of general belongingness was associated with lower levels of moral disengagement, which strengthened moral courage in return. Moreover, this indirect effect varied by levels of perceived meaning in life: the negative association between belongingness and moral disengagement was stronger among individuals with higher levels of meaning. These findings highlight the role of existential meaning in strengthening the moral benefits of social connectedness by reducing tendencies to morally disengage. Practically, the results suggest that interventions aimed at enhancing belonging and life meaning may help cultivate moral courage in academic, organizational, and civic contexts.
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spelling doaj-art-550afd4fff4b4a1b9f314dc22f4093ed2025-08-25T13:25:17ZengGökmen ArslanJournal of Happiness and Health2791-82462025-08-01Articles in press10.47602/johah.v5i2.109Mapping the positive path to moral courage: Through belongingness, meaning in life, and moral disengagementMuhammet Coşkun0Department of Psychology, Abdullah Gül University, Kayseri, Türkiye Numerous studies have explored the factors that influence moral cognition and morally desirable behavior. Yet, that remains doubtful whether the beneficial effects of psychological need satisfaction on individual and social functioning extend to moral processes. To bridge this gap, the current study examined the psychological mechanisms through which a general sense of belongingness may foster morally courageous behavior, focusing on the mediating role of moral disengagement and the moderating role of meaning in life. A cross-sectional design was employed with 290 university students (68% women; Mean age= 22.18), who completed self-report measures assessing belongingness, meaning in life, moral disengagement, and moral courage. Results from a conditional process analysis indicated that moral disengagement had a mediating role in the association between belongingness and moral courage. Specifically, a higher sense of general belongingness was associated with lower levels of moral disengagement, which strengthened moral courage in return. Moreover, this indirect effect varied by levels of perceived meaning in life: the negative association between belongingness and moral disengagement was stronger among individuals with higher levels of meaning. These findings highlight the role of existential meaning in strengthening the moral benefits of social connectedness by reducing tendencies to morally disengage. Practically, the results suggest that interventions aimed at enhancing belonging and life meaning may help cultivate moral courage in academic, organizational, and civic contexts. https://www.journalofhappinessandhealth.com/index.php/johah/article/view/109General belongingnessmeaningmoral disengagementmoral courageprosocial behavior
spellingShingle Muhammet Coşkun
Mapping the positive path to moral courage: Through belongingness, meaning in life, and moral disengagement
Journal of Happiness and Health
General belongingness
meaning
moral disengagement
moral courage
prosocial behavior
title Mapping the positive path to moral courage: Through belongingness, meaning in life, and moral disengagement
title_full Mapping the positive path to moral courage: Through belongingness, meaning in life, and moral disengagement
title_fullStr Mapping the positive path to moral courage: Through belongingness, meaning in life, and moral disengagement
title_full_unstemmed Mapping the positive path to moral courage: Through belongingness, meaning in life, and moral disengagement
title_short Mapping the positive path to moral courage: Through belongingness, meaning in life, and moral disengagement
title_sort mapping the positive path to moral courage through belongingness meaning in life and moral disengagement
topic General belongingness
meaning
moral disengagement
moral courage
prosocial behavior
url https://www.journalofhappinessandhealth.com/index.php/johah/article/view/109
work_keys_str_mv AT muhammetcoskun mappingthepositivepathtomoralcouragethroughbelongingnessmeaninginlifeandmoraldisengagement