The motivated use of moral principles
Judgment and Decision Making, vol. 4, no. 6, pp. 476-491
by Eric Luis Uhlmann, David A. Pizarro, David Tannenbaum and Peter H. Ditto
Five studies demonstrated that people selectively use general moral
principles to rationalize preferred moral conclusions. In Studies 1a
and 1b, college students and community respondents were presented with
variations on a traditional moral scenario that asked whether it was
permissible to sacrifice one innocent man in order to save a greater
number of people. Political liberals, but not relatively more
conservative participants, were more likely to endorse consequentialism
when the victim had a stereotypically White American name than when the
victim had a stereotypically Black American name. Study 2 found
evidence suggesting participants believe that the moral principles they
are endorsing are general in nature: when presented sequentially with
both versions of the scenario, liberals again showed a bias in
their judgments to the initial scenario, but demonstrated consistency
thereafter. Study 3 found conservatives were more likely to endorse
the unintended killing of innocent civilians when Iraqis civilians were
killed than when Americans civilians were killed, while liberals showed
no significant effect. In Study 4, participants primed with patriotism
were more likely to endorse consequentialism when Iraqi civilians were
killed by American forces than were participants primed with
multiculturalism. However, this was not the case when American
civilians were killed by Iraqi forces. Implications for the role of
reason in moral judgment are discussed.
Read the article.