"Ashes to ashes" can leave one feeling mortal in a very vulnerable way. Do we just fall asleep into a dark blankness when we die? Does our energy follow an Einsteinian theory and continue on into another life - another electric soul - that enters the world yet again followed by a baby's cry? How you feel about death is linked to how you feel about the prospect of an afterlife, suggests a study by two University of Kent psychologists, Arnaud Wisman and Nathan Hefleck.
Wisman and Hefleck set out to establish in four separate studies whether people lose hope when thinking about death - known as Terror Management Theory - under a range of different conditions. The research was based on the premise that self-awareness among humans has been shown to create the potential for hope - or the general expectation and feeling that future desired outcomes will occur, according to a press release.
Paradoxically, however, this self-awareness, which is thought to be unique to humans, also renders them conscious of their own mortality - known as mortality salience. The psychologists found that mortality salience affected feelings of hope among people with high and low self-esteem in different ways.
Researchers first established that mortality reduced personal hope for people low in self-esteem, but not for people high in self-esteem. However, afterlife beliefs helped to preserve hope, even among those with low esteem who experience hopelessness when faced with the prospect of their own mortality.
In two studies, the team tested to see if "immortality" would help people with low self-esteem remain hopeful when thinking about death. In one, half the participants read a (bogus) statement indicating that scientists are convinced that there is life after death or a statement arguing that there is no life after death.
In the second, the researchers required that people read either a (bogus) statement that there was an identified gene that promises greatly elongated life or a statement arguing that no such gene has been identified.
Both promises of immortality (life after death or elongated life on earth) preserved hope for people with low self-esteem when they had just thought about their own death.
The study was published in the April 29 issue of the journal Cognition & Emotion.