Value Differentiation and Sexual Orientation
Mots-clés :
values, value differentiation, cognitive polpyphasia, well-being, satisfaction with lifeRésumé
Can individuals create a coherent and unified value system when living in complex social realities,
and encountering discordant values across life contexts, or do they experience a cognitive
polyphasia? Undergraduate students in Israel (N = 93, mean age M = 24.90, SD = 3.05) reporting a
gay or heterosexual sexual orientation were studied. Participants reported the importance of their
values of universalism, benevolence, conformity and hedonism in the social roles of a student, a
close friend, a romantic partner and a man/woman. As hypothesized, value differentiation, the
variability in value importance across contexts, was higher among gay men than among
heterosexuals. The difference is attributed to effects of the socially complex environment
encountered by gay men, which creates a lack of coherence in their values. However, among gay
men, unlike heterosexuals, value differentiation was not related negatively to well-being. The
implications for the gay identity and the value system are discussed.