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Washing hands could help cleanse your conscience, new study reveals
ISLAMABAD—A recent study conducted by the University of Toronto revealed
that washing your hands after impure thoughts pop up in your mind can
cleanse your mind of guilt at a subconscious level emphasizing the fact
that physical and moral purity are correlated.
This phenomenon is termed as the "Mac Beth effect", after Lady Mac Beth
of the famous Shakespeare play who tries to wash her hands following the
murder of King Duncan with the hope that little water would suffice in
cleansing her conscience along with the imaginary blood stains on her
hand.
The study was conducted by Chen-Bo Zhong of the University of Toronto in
Ontario, and Katie Liljenquist of Northwestern University in Chicago.
The study was conducted on about 170 undergraduate students who were
asked to take into consideration either ethical or unethical deeds from
their pasts while participating in a word completion exercise.
The researchers found out that the participants who thought of unethical
or impure thoughts or actions were more likely to interpret W_ _ H, S _
_ P as Wash and Soap respectively compared to those who focused on moral
and ethical thoughts.
Another exercise involved a selection of a gift out of hand wipes and
pencils that were offered to the participants. It was found out that 67
per cent of people, the ones who recollected immoral thoughts or deeds,
chose hand-wipes as their gift, on the hand; pencil was the preferred
gift for the ethical thinkers.
"What we found is that, after an individual has been morally challenged,
there is an increased need to cleanse. And this reflects in their
preference for cleansing products over non- cleansing products" Zhong
said.
"Daily hygiene routines such as washing hands, as simple and benign as
they may seem, can deliver a powerful antidote to threatened morality,"
journal Science quoting him reported. —Agencies |