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Webster, R. J., & Saucier, D. A. (2013). Angels and demons are among us: Assessing
individual differences in belief in pure evil and belief in pure good. Personality and
Social Psychology Bulletin, 39(11), 1455-1470.
In this article, Webster & Saucier (2013) assess individual differences in the belief in
pure evil (BPE) and belief in pure good (BPG) by conducting five studies. Studies 1-3 focused
on developing reliable scales for assessing BPE and BPG. While studies 4 and 5 demonstrated
their relationship to a wide variety of prosociality and aggression measures. Study participants
involved two group of introductory psychology students who complemented all potential BPG
and BPE items during different semesters. From the study results, there is evidence showing that
BPE and BPG consistently relate to prosocial and aggressive orientations towards others.
Question: What is the just and fair explanation as to why people do bad things?
Coursey, L. E., Gertner, R. T., Williams, B. C., Kenworthy, J. B., Paulus, P. B., & Doboli, S.
(2019). Linking the divergent and convergent processes of collaborative creativity: The
impact of expertise levels and elaboration processes. Frontiers in psychology, 10, 699.
In this article, Coursey et al. (2019) used an online survey of two hundred thirty
participants to examine the impact of expertise levels and elaboration processes in groups.
Collective ideation or creativity is a crucial innovative progress factor, and divergent ideation is
integral to creativity. The participants were undergraduate students and the procedure was run in
groups of four. Each group met for three sessions in the span of three weeks, session one and two
being asynchronous and divergent, while session three was convergent. The authors used a
theoretical model (DCIM) to link divergent and convergent creativity. From the results, expertise

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1 Article Response Name Institution Course Professor Date 2 Webster, R. J., & Saucier, D. A. (2013). Angels and demons are among us: Assessing individual differences in belief in pure evil and belief in pure good. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 39(11), 1455-1470. In this article, Webster & Saucier (2013) assess individual differences in the belief in pure evil (BPE) and belief in pure good (BPG) by conducting five studies. Studies 1-3 focused on developing reliable scales for assessing BPE and BPG. While studies 4 and 5 demonstrated their relationship to a wide variety of prosociality and aggression measures. Study participants involved two group of introductory psychology students who complemented all potential BPG and BPE items during different semesters. From the study results, there is evidence showing that BPE and BPG consistently relate to prosocial and aggressive orientations towards others. Question: What is the just and fair explanation as to why people do bad things? Coursey, L. E., Gertner, R. T., Williams, B. C., Kenworthy, J. B., Paulus, P. B., & Doboli, S. (2019). Linking the divergent and convergent processes of collaborative creativity: The impact ...
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