Broadening Your Mind to Include Others - The relationship between serotonergic psychedelic experiences and maladaptive narcissism_PREPRINT
Valerie van Mulukom, Ruairi Patterson, Michiel van Elk
March 10, 2020 preprint DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/fp8e3 via OpenAlex
Summary
High levels of awe experienced during recent classical serotonergic psychedelic (CSP) experiences are linked to lower levels of maladaptive narcissism, characterized by entitlement and lack of empathy. In a study with 414 participants, awe was associated with increased feelings of connectedness and empathy, which contributed to decreased exploitative-entitled narcissism. However, feelings of ego dissolution did not show the same effect. This indicates CSPs may have therapeutic potential for addressing issues related to connectedness and empathy.
Study at a glance
| Design | preprint |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 414 |
| Population | individuals who have recently experienced classical serotonergic psychedelics |
| Key finding | Recent awe experiences during CSP use were associated with decreased levels of maladaptive narcissism through enhanced feelings of connectedness and empathy. |
Abstract
RationaleThere has been a recent increase in research showing that classical serotonergic psychedelic (CSP) drugs may be used to ameliorate certain health issues and disorders. Here we hypothesized that CSP experiences, through their ability to induce awe and ego-dissolution, may result in a reduction of maladaptive narcissistic personality traits, such as a strong sense of entitlement and lack of empathy. ObjectivesOur objective was to investigate whether high levels of awe and ego dissolution during recent CSP experiences are associated with current lower levels of maladaptive narcissism.Methods In this pre-registered high-powered (N = 414) study, we used an online survey including several validated scales to test our hypothesis. ResultsA statistically significant mediation model indicated that recent CSP-induced awe experiences were associated with increased feelings of connectedness and affective empathetic drive, which in turn were associated with decreased exploitative-entitled narcissism. This relationship held even when taking into account sensation-seeking personality features. We found no evidence for feelings of ego dissolution during the experience to have the same effect. ConclusionsFeelings of awe, but not ego dissolution, during recent CSP experiences were associated with increased feelings of connectedness and empathy, which in turn were associated with decreased levels of maladaptive narcissism personality features. This suggests that there is a therapeutic potential of CSPs for disorders involving connectedness and empathy, such as the treatment of pathological narcissism and other clinical disorders, and that the induction of connectedness through awe appears to be the driving force behind this potential.