Denton K, Krebs D
Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 1990 Aug;59(2):242-8. doi: 10.1037//0022-3514.59.2.242.
Forty men and women were given Kohlberg's Moral Judgment Interview (MJI) while drinking in a natural setting and were asked a series of questions about whether they should and would drive impaired. In a second testing in an academic context, these subjects were given an alternate form of the MJI and were asked whether they drove on the previous occasion. Forty additional men and women completed the MJI in an academic context and responded to the impaired driving questions hypothetically. Results revealed that Ss scored lower on moral maturity in the the social drinking contexts than in the academic contexts, especially when highly intoxicated. Ss responding hypothetically attributed more moral integrity to themselves than to others, indicating they would not drive impaired. The self-righteousness of these attributions was apparent in the behavior of Ss who drove to the social drinking settings--all but 1 drove home, however impaired.
40名男性和女性在自然饮酒场景中接受了科尔伯格道德判断访谈(MJI),并被问及一系列关于他们是否应该以及是否会在 impaired 状态下开车的问题。在学术环境中的第二次测试中,这些受试者接受了MJI的另一种形式,并被问及他们上一次是否开车。另外40名男性和女性在学术环境中完成了MJI,并对酒驾问题进行了假设性回答。结果显示,受试者在社交饮酒场景中的道德成熟度得分低于学术场景,尤其是在高度醉酒时。假设性回答的受试者将更多的道德完整性归因于自己而非他人,表明他们不会在 impaired 状态下开车。这些归因的自以为是在开车前往社交饮酒场所的受试者行为中显而易见——除了1人之外,所有人都开车回家了,无论他们有多 impaired。