Cognitive processes in imaginative moral shifts: How judgments of morally unacceptable actions change

被引:7
|
作者
Tepe, Beyza [1 ]
Byrne, Ruth M. J. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Bahcesehir Univ, Dept Psychol, Osmanpasa Mektebi Sk 4-6, TR-34349 Istanbul, Turkey
[2] Univ Dublin, Sch Psychol, Dublin 2, Ireland
[3] Univ Dublin, Inst Neurosci, Trinity Coll, Dublin 2, Ireland
关键词
Imagination; Counterfactuals; Morality; Judgments; COUNTERFACTUAL THINKING; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTANCE; CULPABLE CONTROL; DECISION-MAKING; DUAL PROCESSES; NEURAL BASIS; CONFLICT; CONTEXT; EXPLANATION; REFLECTION;
D O I
10.3758/s13421-022-01315-0
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
How do people come to consider a morally unacceptable action, such as "a passenger in an airplane does not want to sit next to a Muslim passenger and so he tells the stewardess the passenger must be moved to another seat", to be less unacceptable? We propose they tend to imagine counterfactual alternatives about how things could have been different that transform the unacceptable action to be less unacceptable. Five experiments identify the cognitive processes underlying this imaginative moral shift: an action is judged less unacceptable when people imagine circumstances in which it would have been moral. The effect occurs for immediate counterfactuals and reflective ones, but is greater when participants create an immediate counterfactual first, and diminished when they create a reflective one first. The effect also occurs for unreasonable actions. We discuss the implications for alternative theories of the mental representations and cognitive processes underlying moral judgments.
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页码:1103 / 1123
页数:21
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