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    • Unyielding Conviction in Personal Beliefs. A self-righteous individual holds firm to their beliefs, often believing their perspective is the only right one.
    • Critical Judgement of Others. One of the hallmarks of self-righteousness is an overwhelming need to judge others. Such individuals often perceive themselves as morally superior, leading them to criticize those who do not align with their beliefs or standards.
    • Inability to Admit Wrongdoing. For a self-righteous person, admitting they are wrong is a rarity. They often go to great lengths to justify their actions, even when evidence points to the contrary, as they believe they are perpetually in the right.
    • Lack of Empathy. Empathy involves understanding and sharing the feelings of another. A self-righteous individual often struggles with this, as they prioritize their views and feelings over those of others, leading to strained relationships and misunderstandings.
  2. Jul 15, 2017 · What's Behind Self-Righteous Attitudes? Research suggests that we all perceive ourselves as more generous than others. For example, we tend to believe we are more likely than others to donate...

    • Traci Pedersen
  3. Jun 12, 2014 · In his acclaimed book, The Righteous Mind, he examined the conundrum behind good people divided by religion and politics. Jonathan Haidt explains “liberal” and “conservative” not narrowly or necessarily as political affiliations, but as personality types, ways of moving through the world.

    • Are self-righteous people discriminated against?1
    • Are self-righteous people discriminated against?2
    • Are self-righteous people discriminated against?3
    • Are self-righteous people discriminated against?4
    • Are self-righteous people discriminated against?5
  4. Nov 24, 2010 · First, self-righteousness can be analyzed as part of an account of our moral attitudes to others. Self-righteousness can be found together with emotions, whether self-directed like pride, or other-directed, including anger, indignation, contempt, disgust, resentment, and schadenfreude.

    • Jeanette Bicknell
    • bicknellj@hotmail.com
    • 2010
    • The Theological Perspective
    • The Secular Perspective
    • Reconciling The Religious with The Secular

    Let’s explore first how righteousness and self-righteousness have been differentially defined from a doctrinal vantage point. Biblically speaking, righteousness is about being in right standing with God—vs. self-righteousness, recognized as giving final authority for one’s decisions not to God but to one’s self. So self-righteousness becomes, parad...

    Those perceived as self-righteous don’t really fare any better when seen in a more secular light. But it also needs to be added that the righteous (or so-called “godly”) are themselves typically viewed less positively when placed under this more worldly microscope. In fact, the two types don’t diverge anywhere as much in this context. In some ways,...

    If righteousness pinpoints a person’s allegiance to a moral code without their feeling compelled to self-advantageously compare it to another’s, then we can conclude that—whether seen monastically or materialistically—it involves a humility free of self-righteousness. And it may well be that, first and foremost, authentic righteousness is best perc...

  5. Jul 11, 2017 · All of the experiments revealed that self-righteousness is asymmetric. Participants believed that they are less evil than others, but no more moral than them.

  6. Self-righteousness (also called sanctimony, sententiousness, and holier-than-thou attitudes) [1] [2] is an attitude and belief of moral superiority derived from a person deeming their own beliefs, actions, or affiliations to be of greater virtue than those of others. [3]