Temperance (virtue)
Encyclopedia
Temperance has been studied by religious thinkers, philosophers, and more recently, psychologists, particularly in the positive psychology movement. It is considered a virtue, a core value that can be seen consistently across time and cultures (see Historical and Religious Perspectives). It is considered one of the four cardinal virtues
Cardinal virtues
In Christian traditionthere are 4 cardinal virtues:*Prudence - able to judge between actions with regard to appropriate actions at a given time*Justice - proper moderation between self-interest and the rights and needs of others...

, for it is believed that no virtue could be sustained in the face of inability to control oneself, if the virtue was opposed to some desire. It is also one of the six main categories of the VIA Character Strengths (see Major Theoretical Approaches). Temperance is generally defined by control over excess, so that it has many such classes, such as abstinence, chastity, modesty, humility, prudence, self-regulation, forgiveness and mercy; each of these involves restraining some impulse, such as sexual desire, vanity, or anger.

Historical, Religious, and Philosophical Perspectives

Themes of temperance can be seen across cultures and time, as illustrated here.

China

Confucius
Confucius
Confucius , literally "Master Kong", was a Chinese thinker and social philosopher of the Spring and Autumn Period....

 encouraged modesty and self-control for the humane life. In the Analects, speaks of those who “choose to live simply (6:10), refrain from self-aggrandizing boasts (6:14) or extravagance (3:4), and place hard work before reward (6:22)” as virtuous. In addition, the Taoist Lao-Tzu advocates temperance: He who becomes arrogant with wealth and power . . . sows the seeds of his own misfortune [chap. 9] . . . he who boasts of his own achievements harms his credibility . . . he who is arrogant experiences no growth in wisdom [chap. 24] . . . he who knows glory, but keeps to humility . . . is sufficient in the eternal virtue [chap. 28].”

Buddhism

Temperance is an essential part of the Eightfold Path. The third and fifth of the five precepts (pañca-sila) reflect values of temperance: “misconduct concerning sense pleasures” and drunkenness are to be avoided.

Hinduism

Temperance is a crucial component, especially in the act of self-denial, but is mostly reserved for the aristocracy (the lower classes were to be concerned with labor, not higher order virtues).

West

Temperance is a major Athenian virtue, as advocated by Plato
Plato
Plato , was a Classical Greek philosopher, mathematician, student of Socrates, writer of philosophical dialogues, and founder of the Academy in Athens, the first institution of higher learning in the Western world. Along with his mentor, Socrates, and his student, Aristotle, Plato helped to lay the...

; self-restraint (sôphrosune) is one of his four core virtues of the ideal city, and echoed by Aristotle
Aristotle
Aristotle was a Greek philosopher and polymath, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. His writings cover many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, poetry, theater, music, logic, rhetoric, linguistics, politics, government, ethics, biology, and zoology...

. In the Judeo-Christian tradition, temperance is prolific. The Old Testament
Old Testament
The Old Testament, of which Christians hold different views, is a Christian term for the religious writings of ancient Israel held sacred and inspired by Christians which overlaps with the 24-book canon of the Masoretic Text of Judaism...

 emphasizes temperance as a core virtue, as evidenced in both Solomon’s Book of Proverbs
Book of Proverbs
The Book of Proverbs , commonly referred to simply as Proverbs, is a book of the Hebrew Bible.The original Hebrew title of the book of Proverbs is "Míshlê Shlomoh" . When translated into Greek and Latin, the title took on different forms. In the Greek Septuagint the title became "paroimai paroimiae"...

 and in the Ten Commandments
Ten Commandments
The Ten Commandments, also known as the Decalogue , are a set of biblical principles relating to ethics and worship, which play a fundamental role in Judaism and most forms of Christianity. They include instructions to worship only God and to keep the Sabbath, and prohibitions against idolatry,...

, with its admonitions against adultery and covetousness. The New Testament
New Testament
The New Testament is the second major division of the Christian biblical canon, the first such division being the much longer Old Testament....

 does so as well, with forgiveness
Forgiveness
Forgiveness is typically defined as the process of concluding resentment, indignation or anger as a result of a perceived offense, difference or mistake, or ceasing to demand punishment or restitution. The Oxford English Dictionary defines forgiveness as 'to grant free pardon and to give up all...

 being central to theology
Theology
Theology is the systematic and rational study of religion and its influences and of the nature of religious truths, or the learned profession acquired by completing specialized training in religious studies, usually at a university or school of divinity or seminary.-Definition:Augustine of Hippo...

 and self-control being one of the Fruits of the Spirit. With regard to Christian theology, the word temperance is used by the King James Version in Galatians 5:23 for the Greek word ἐγκρατεία (enkrateia), which means self-control or discipline (Strong's Concordance
Strong's Concordance
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, generally known as Strong's Concordance, is a concordance of the King James Bible that was constructed under the direction of Dr. James Strong and first published in 1890. Dr. Strong was Professor of exegetical theology at Drew Theological Seminary at...

, 1466). Thomas Aquinas
Thomas Aquinas
Thomas Aquinas, O.P. , also Thomas of Aquin or Aquino, was an Italian Dominican priest of the Catholic Church, and an immensely influential philosopher and theologian in the tradition of scholasticism, known as Doctor Angelicus, Doctor Communis, or Doctor Universalis...

 promoted Plato’s original virtues in addition to several others.

Contemporary

Values of temperance are still advocated by more modern sources such as the Boy Scouts
Boy Scouts
A Boy Scout is a member of a Scouting organization. There are thousands of national Scouting organizations or federations; these are grouped into six international Scouting associations with some non-aligned organizations....

, William Bennett
William Bennett
William John "Bill" Bennett is an American conservative pundit, politician, and political theorist. He served as United States Secretary of Education from 1985 to 1988. He also held the post of Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy under George H. W...

, and Ben Franklin  Philosophy has contributed a number of lessons to the study of traits, particularly in its study of injunctions and its listing and organizing of virtues.

The road to the psychological study of virtue

There have been many roadblocks in to the psychological study of virtue. In the past, psychology was more accepting to the study of character and virtues, but the topic lost favor for some time due to a number of concerns. First, the concern was that objective research would be compromised by personal beliefs. As a result, the idea of character and morality were largely ignored, especially in the realm of personality trait psychology, where references to character and morally tinged terms were completely avoided, even banned, by Gordon Allport, a major personality psychologist at the time. Guilt by association may have played a role in the controversy surrounding intelligence tests, and psychoanalytic theory’s hold on the discipline for some time also deterred from the study of positive traits, which were chalked up to unconscious impulses. Finally, perhaps most importantly, the so-called “medical model” approach that has been (and continues to be) so pervasive in the study and practice of psychology over the last several decades encourages a focus on human deficits and disorders rather than strengths and virtues. However, Peterson and Seligman (2004) argue that “an exclusive focus on what is wrong with people can lead us to overlook what is right and precludes the possibility that one of the best ways to undo someone’s weakness is by encouraging his or her strengths.” (55-56)

Despite difficulties, a number of leading psychologists, historical and contemporary, have contributed to the rise of the study of strength traits. Thorndike, an early, influential behavioral psychologist, “proposed that a person’s morality (character) could be measured in quantitative terms,” just like intelligence. Erikson’s stage theory involved persons confronting various challenges that occurred throughout the lifespan, and with each stage, various “psychosocial” virtues were to develop. Especially relative to temperance was the acquisition of self-control in the early childhood stage. Maslow’s hierarchy of needs includes the self-actualization near the top; in his characteristics of self-actualized individuals he included a number of virtues, including humility and respect for others. The “Big Five” in personality psychology includes the trait of conscientiousness, which is related to the strength of self-regulation.

Psychological Perspectives

Before a discussion of psychological approaches to the topic of temperance begins, one must consider the fact that “temperance” is more of an overarching concept to house a number of more specific traits and patterns that can be specifically operationalized. That is, most studies deal not with the overarching virtue of temperance but with its specific subclasses. For the purposes of this entry, the separate but related subclasses discussed will include: (1) forgiveness and mercy, (2) modesty and humility, (3) prudence, and (4) self-regulation.

Forgiveness

This strength is characterized by “forgiving those who have done wrong, accepting the shortcomings of others, giving people a second chance, and not being vengeful.” According to Peterson and Seligman (2004), “forgiveness represents a suite of prosocial changes that occur within an individual who has been offended or damaged by a relationship partner (McCullough, Pargament, & Thoresen, 2000a). When people forgive, their basic motivations or action tendencies regarding the transgressor become more positive (e.g., benevolent, kind, generous) and less negative (e.g., vengeful, avoidant).” As was previously alluded to, the major religions stress forgiveness especially in their worldviews.

Measures

Currently, measures for forgiveness are mostly self-report (e.g., Mauger et al., 1992; Mullet, Houdbine, Laumonier, & Girard, 1998) but also include hypothetical scenarios (e.g., Berry et al., 2001; Rye et al., 2001) and peer report (Berry et al., 2001). Better measures are needed for forgiveness, though, perhaps by creating an actual scenario in the laboratory and subsequently assessing the participant’s level of forgiveness.

Empirical Findings: Correlates

To summarize, compared with less forgiving individuals, it has been found that more-forgiving people tend to:
  • Be slightly lower on negative affects such as anger, anxiety, depression, and hostility
  • Act in a more socially desirable manner
  • Give benefits such as money to someone who had been previously been rude to them
  • Score higher on the “Big Five”’s agreeableness and lower on neuroticism - this is a very strong correlation
  • Be older - developmental studies suggest that at our youngest, we are least forgiving, and this trait increases with age

Emprical Findings: Enabling Factors

Experiencing empathy toward the transgressor is an enabling factor for forgiving, whereas rumination on the offense is a disabling factor. In addition, people are less likely to forgive when they believe the transgressor’s actions to be intentional, and when there are more dire consequences (Boon & Sulsky, 1997; Girard & Mullet, 1997; Takaku, Weiner, & Ohbuchi, 2001). Along the same vein, apologies appear to go a long way in promoting forgiveness (Darby & Schlenker, 1982; McCullough et al., 1997, 1998).

Emprical Findings: Cultural and Gender Differences

There appear to be no significant differences between men and women’s tendency to forgive (Berry et al., 2001). Culturally speaking, there appears to be a difference in the factors motivating individuals toward forgiveness: persons from collectives cultures forgive out of “concern about maintaining positive relationships with others and about maintaining social norms regarding how a victim should respond, whereas people from individualist cultures are
more motivated by the desire to maintain a favorable self-identity or to fulfill abstract moral principles (e.g., justice; Takaku et al., 2001).”

Applications and Interventions

Various methods have been designed to increase forgiveness for individual psychotherapy (Enright & Coyle, 1998; Kaminer et al., 2000; Malcom & Greenberg, 2000; McCullough & Worthington, 1994); marital therapy (Gordon, Baucom, & Snyder, 2000); and psychoeducational groups (Worthington et al., 2000; Worthington, Sandage, & Berry, 2000)

An intervention method developed by Ernright has been shown to encourage forgiveness and also increases positive states while decreasing negative ones (Enright & Coyle, 1998). A number of pyschoeducational group studies have shown to be effective when promoting empathy (McCullough et al., 1997) and encouraging forgiveness (Worthington, Sandage, et al., 2000). Finally, the effectiveness of interventions depends on their length of time - at least six hours should be committed (Worthington, Sandage, et al., 2000).

Humility

The strength of modesty and humility is characterized by “letting one’s accomplishments speak for themselves [and] not regarding oneself as more special than one is.”
A review by Tangney (2000, 2002) “identified a number of humility’s key features:
  • an accurate (not underestimated) sense of one’s abilities and achievements
  • the ability to acknowledge one’s mistakes, imperfections, gaps in knowledge, and limitations (often with reference to a “higher power”)
  • openness to new ideas, contradictory information, and advice
  • keeping one’s abilities and accomplishments in perspective
  • relatively low focus on the self or an ability to “forget the self”
  • appreciation of the value of all things, as well as the many different ways that people and things can contribute to our world”

It should be noted that some cultural differences seem to exist for this strength; whereas humility is celebrated in Buddhism’s emphasis on the balanced life, in the United States, humility is infrequently praised. The US’s cultural values of individualism and pride, as well as the more modern emphasis on self-esteem, may account for this fact.

Measures

Humility is a difficult trait to operationalize and measure by itself, other than through self-report, which would be rather unreliable. Thus, it seems that the best way to operationalize humility is by equating it inversely with the trait of narcissism
Narcissism
Narcissism is a term with a wide range of meanings, depending on whether it is used to describe a central concept of psychoanalytic theory, a mental illness, a social or cultural problem, or simply a personality trait...

, self-enhancement, and/or defensiveness, which are essentially the opposite of humility. Much work must be done to better the measures, as many studies on humility are plagued by low reliability.

Empirical Findings: Correlational

Because measures on humility are currently so weak, the best option for studying empirical findings is to look at the findings for narcissism - so in reading the findings below, the opposite should be true for the humble. Thus, relative to those who score lower, people who score highly on narcissism tend to:
  • be more competitive
  • be higher on dominance
  • show more hostility
  • be more angry
  • show more aggression
  • feel more “entitled”
  • both seek and give forgiveness less frequently
  • Initially seem charming, but eventually be disliked by others
  • Brag, and be disliked for it
  • Cause interpersonal conflict through actions like cheating on partners and taking credit from close others on interdependent tasks
  • Fail to express gratitude
  • Have unstable self-esteem


In addition, in one study, violent criminals scored significantly higher on “personal entitlement” inventories than college students (Bushman & Baumeister, 2002). Thus, one can make the conclusion that humility serves as a protective factor against social conflict, since humble people tend to lack many qualities leading to conflict (hostility, bragging, lack of forgiveness, etc.). Finally, “willingness to self-criticize, if moderated, may ultimately help people move toward self-improvement goals (Heine et al., 2001). Personal deficits will be addressed only if we are willing to see that they exist.”

Empirical Findings: Developmental

Parenting is believed to be a crucial factor in the development of humility. Specifically, factors promoting secure attachment are believed to promote humility (cf. Bowlby, 1973; chapter 13). Specifically, Peterson and Seligman (2004) propose that “humility would be unlikely to stem from parenting or educational styles that involve the following:
(a) an extreme emphasis on performance, appearance, popularity, or other external
sources of self-evaluation, particularly if combined with perfectionist performance standards;
(b) inaccurate, excessive praise or criticism
(c) frequent comparison of the child against siblings or peers, especially if this comparison is accompanied by competitive messages
(d) communicating to the child that he or she is superior or inferior to other people.
Such practices would predispose a child to turn to external sources of validation for a sense of security, and they would also encourage the child to make competitive, invidious comparisons.”

Empirical Findings: Enabling and Inhibiting Factors

Enabling factors for humility include the “appearance of attachment, the development of a sense of self, the emergence of independence in infancy, openness to new experiences, experience with decision making, and life review and integration in old age” (Santrock, 1996, pp. 332–333). In addition, parenting and education that promote identity development are more likely to lead to humble individuals, but the direct influences leading to humility are yet undiscovered.

Empirical Findings: Gender and Cultural Factors

In general, it appears that women are somewhat more modest (Berg, Stephan, & Dodson, 1981; Heatherington et al., 1998), have slightly lower self-esteem (Kling, Hyde, Showers, & Buswell, 1999), and have lower levels of narcissism (L. Carroll, 1989) than men. Culturally speaking, collectivist cultures tend to value humility more than individualistic ones, as evidenced by a study on Japan vs. the United States (Heine et al., 1999, 2001; Markus & Kitayama, 1991).

Applications and Interventions

“If self-enhancement is understood as a motivated and partially controllable strategy (Krueger, 1998b)., and not as a cognitive illusion, humility seems to be within reach for most.” However, as of yet there are no direct interventions to promote humility. Research suggests that 12-step self-help groups (Kurtz & Ketcham, 1992), character development programs, and religious interventions might foster humility (Watts, 1960). Peterson and Seligman (2004) suggest a number of strategies for improving humility, including:
  • Providing individuals with accurate feedback about themselves
  • Techniques fostering awe
  • Doing chores (perhaps community service?)
  • Seeking forgiveness
  • Keeping a gratitude journal
    Gratitude journal
    A gratitude journal is a diary of things for which one is grateful. Gratitude journals are used by individuals who wish to focus their attention on the positive things in their lives....

  • developing a close relationship with someone (W. K. Campbell et al., 2000)

With such interventions, “the goal would be to enable the individual to feel safe enough to nondefensively acknowledge both strengths and limitations.” The warning should be made, however, that such interventions run the risk of causing self-esteem to plummet if not conducted carefully

Prudence

Prudence is characterized by “being careful about one’s choices, not taking undue risks, and not saying or doing things that might later be regretted.” VIA Prudence’s roots date back to Aristotle’s writings on practical wisdom, in which he hails it as a crucial, linking virtue. Currently, prudence is usually used in reference to financial or political situations, but to psychologists prudence’s meaning extends much further. According to Peterson and Seligman (2004), “Individuals with this strength have the following attributes:
  • They take a foresighted stance toward their personal future, thinking and caring about it, planning for it, and holding long-term goals and aspirations.
  • They are skilled at resisting self-defeating impulses and at persisting in beneficial activities that lack immediate appeal.
  • They show a style of thinking about everyday life choices that is reflective, deliberate, and practical.
  • They harmonize the multiple goals and interests that motivate them, forming these into a stable, coherent, and unconflicted form of life.”

Measures

  • NEO-PI-R Conscientiousness Subscale (Costa & McCrae, 1992)
  • NEO-FFI Conscientiousness Subscale (Costa & McCrae, 1992)
  • Trait Descriptions Conscientiousness Subscale (L. R. Goldberg, 1992)
  • Big Five Inventory (BFI) Conscientiousness Subscale (John & Srivastava, 1999)
  • Hogan Personality Inventory (HPI) Conscientiousness Subscale (R. Hogan & Hogan, 1992)

In addition, prudence is well-linked to the Big Five characteristic of conscientiousness, such that findings on conscientiousness can also apply to prudence. The same goes for moderation.

Empirical Findings: Correlational

Findings suggest that prudent people (or those with more conscientiousness, or who have more congruence among their strivings) tend to:
  • be higher than average on agreeableness, extroversion, and intellect
  • be less neurotic than average
  • have higher positive affect, with more optimism
  • have lower negative affect, such as hopelessness
  • have lower levels of psychopathology and delinquency (and is a better predictor over all other Big Five Factors)
  • be less likely to have antisocial personality disorder, and more likely to have compulsive personality disorder, than average
  • live longer
  • have better health and well-being
  • in jobs, have more productivity, success in training, duration of tenure, and salary
  • predict performance of military leaders, which “implies a useful paradigm for assessing political leadership”
  • be older

Empirical Findings: Developmental

As was mentioned previously, prudence tends to increase with age. Although there are few studies dealing with prudence under that particular title, much research has been done on impulse control and delay of gratification (see self-regulation section), both of which are correlated with prudence. One study even suggested that prudence may be linked with altruism in adulthood.

Empirical Findings: Enabling and Inhibiting Factors

Very little research exists on the topic of what factors foster or inhibit prudence. But in theory, prudence would be thwarted in people who:
  • Live under chaotic and unpredictable conditions (such that planning is pointless)
  • have little autonomy and personal control
  • are too single-mindedly devoted to one goal rather than many

Empirical Findings: Gender and Cultural Differences

No research exists on prudence specifically and gender, but conscientiousness shows no difference across genders There is also little research on cultural differences for prudence, although it has been suggested that prudence would not be as advantageous in collectivist cultures.

Applications and Interventions

No interventions are currently known to improve levels of prudence, but it has been suggested that programs for financial self-discipline, safer sex, and certain forms of cognitive and/or behavioral psychotherapy may prove useful.

Self-Regulation

Self-regulation, or self-control, is characterized as “regulating what one feels and does, being disciplined, and controlling one’s appetites and emotions.” It “refers to how a person exerts control over his or her own responses so as to pursue goals and live up to standards.” Its roots lie in its early use by Bandura, who theorized that individuals administer internal rewards and punishments for their behavior when exerting control over themselves. Perhaps most influential are the delayed gratification studies by Mischel et al., which will be discussed later.

Measures

Most research focuses on behavioral measures of self-regulation, such as amount of food or alcohol consumed in a setting. A number of other scales exist, but tend to be too narrowly focused (on food, for example) or lacking in validity. Peterson and Seligman (2004) recommend both the Self-Control Scale (Tangney, Baumeister, & Boone, 2004) and the Low Self-Control Scale (Grasmick et al., 1993) for their “psychometric properties, face validity, and a demonstrated capacity to produce significant results”

Empirical Findings: Correlational

According to Peteerson and Seligman (2004), “self-regulation failure is central to nearly all the personal and social problems that currently plague citizens of the modern, developed world. These problems include drug addiction and abuse, alcoholism, smoking, crime and violence, unwanted pregnancy, sexually transmitted disease, underachievement in schools, gambling, personal debt and credit card abuse, lack of financial savings, anger and hostility, failure to exercise regularly, and overeating.”

Some of the most influential research that has been done related to self-regulation is Mischel and his colleague’s studies on children and delay of gratification. In these studies, children have the option of receiving an immediate, smaller reward, or a delayed, larger reward. Those who choose to wait for the larger reward, despite the temptation of the immediate reward, are characterized by “delaying gratification.” In longitudinal follow-ups, the children who delayed gratification (and thus showed self-regulation) were more successful both academically and socially a decade later (Mischel, Shoda, and Peake, 1998). So those who exhibit high self-control tend to:
  • have a higher GPA (Wolfe and Johnson, 1995)
  • ”report fewer pathological symptoms, including Somatization, obsessive-compulsive patterns, depression, anxiety, hostile anger, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation, and psychoticism, as well as higher self-acceptance and higher self esteem”
  • be more cooperative, get along better with others, and have more satisfying relationships and family life (E. J. Finkel & Campbell, 2000; Vohs, Ciarocco, & Baumeister, 2003)
  • be more financially responsible (Romal & Kaplan, 1995)
  • be less likely to abuse alcohol and other drugs, and to commit crime


Empirical Findings: Developmental Factors

Little is known about the development of self-control. Even in early childhood studies, such as the delay of gratification, it is unclear whether the child or the parenting is most responsible - so it’s a nature vs nurture debate.

Empirical Findings: Enabling and Inhibiting Factors

Self-regulation appears to function like muscle, growing initially fatigued but stronger over time with frequent exercise. Thus, self-control functions as a limited resource that can only be maintained for so long. Self-monitoring (attending to one’s own behavior) appears to be a crucial factor in self-regulation (Carver & Scheier, 1981)

Gender and Cultural Factors

It appears that there are no real differences between males and females in their self-control abilities. However, the specific application of self-control may differ, with males displaying more sexual aggression and women being more likely to binge eat. Little is known about general differences in self-control across cultures, but more specific applications such as alcoholism (Peele, 1989) teen pregnancy (Barber, 2000) may see differences across cultures or even religions (Weber, 1904).

Applications and Interventions

Little research has been done on specific interventions, and it is yet unclear whether self-regulation can truly be taught. However, it has been suggested that using conditional statements (i.e. “if someone offers you drugs, just say no”) may be helpful for parents attempting to instill self-control in their children. Additionally, “a brief longitudinal study by Muraven et al. (1999) found that people who worked on their self-regulatory capacities by daily exercises such as improving their posture ended up performing better than other people on laboratory tests of self-control.”

Controversies and Future Directions

For forgiveness, more reliable measures are needed, and longitudinal studies are needed in order to support the claim about forgiveness varying as a function of age, and also to study temporal variation in forgiveness. More studies on the social aspects of forgiveness should be done to ascertain how forgiveness affects social groups in families or communities. In addition, little is known about the actual process of forgiveness - what goes on cognitively and emotionally when someone forgives? Finally, perhaps most “hot topic” with regards to forgiveness is the notion that forgiveness may be associated with health benefits (preventative and curative) and well-being. Thus far, there have been only a few studies with weak designs on this topic, so stronger studies need to explore this idea. One promising study by Witvliet, Ludwig, and Vander Laan’s (2001) showed that “forgiveness can influence short-term markers for sympathetic nervous system arousal.”

For humility, much more research must be done. Diverging opinions on what exactly humility is have prevented studies from being reliable, and a consensus needs to be reached on its definition, as contrasted with modesty. In addition, the question of what positive traits humility exhibits (apart from the absence of negative ones). The question of how humility looks across the lifespan should be asked. And finally, the question of whether humility can be developed in an individual, and how (through interventions etc.) should be addressed.

For prudence, general research is very much needed, as there is basically none on prudence specifically as a construct (only related ones such as conscientiousness).

For self-regulation, it is still unclear whether it can be taught. A central question to be asked is what kind of interventions, if any, can be done, especially on the part of parenting techniques. It is unclear whether any genetic, environmental, or other factors have any influence on the development of self-regulation, but these areas would be very worthwhile to explore, considering the many benefits of this strength.
In general temperance appears to be the lowest-scoring area out of all the virtues on the VIA survey, suggesting that it is a weakness across individuals. Perhaps this explains why the research is so lacking thus far. Given the many benefits of temperance (which should be further explored) and its potential to enable the psychological good life, exploring it further should prove to be an important endeavor.
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