My hypothesis is that when people give insincere praise, they are saying things that would ordinarily raise someone's status, but subtle cues related to tone or body language betray the fact that they are not in fact assigned the person a higher status.
To disprove the hypothesis, we could try to think of a scenario where someone gives insincere praise while simultaneously assigning the person higher status with that praise. I can't think of any such scenario but maybe you can.
Note that achievement and team pride both basically amount to status.
Note that achievement and team pride both basically amount to status.
Note that you left out the word "pleasure", which I explicitly used to denote something different from "achievement" per se. I can be really pleased that somebody did something because now it's less work for me, for example, and this has zero to do with their status. Appreciation != status.
From the Harvard Business Review, an article entitled: "Can We Reverse The Stanford Prison Experiment?"
By: Greg McKeown
Posted: June 12, 2012
Clicky Link of Awesome! Wheee! Push me!
Summary:
Royal Canadian Mounted Police attempt a program where they hand out "Positive Tickets"
This idea can be applied to Real Life