Harvard Business School, Harvard University, Boston, MA 02163, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2012 Jun;102(6):1164-77. doi: 10.1037/a0028381.
Dishonest behavior can have various psychological outcomes. We examine whether one consequence could be the forgetting of moral rules. In 4 experiments, participants were given the opportunity to behave dishonestly, and thus earn undeserved money, by over-reporting their performance on an ability-based task. Before the task, they were exposed to moral rules (i.e., an honor code). Those who cheated were more likely to forget the moral rules after behaving dishonestly, even though they were equally likely to remember morally irrelevant information (Experiment 1). Furthermore, people showed moral forgetting only after cheating could be enacted but not before cheating (Experiment 2), despite monetary incentives to recall the rules accurately (Experiment 3). Finally, moral forgetting appears to result from decreased access to moral rules after cheating (Experiment 4).
不诚实的行为可能会产生各种心理后果。我们研究其中一种后果是否是道德规则的遗忘。在 4 项实验中,参与者有机会通过夸大自己在基于能力的任务上的表现来不诚实地获得不应得的钱。在任务之前,他们接触到了道德规则(即荣誉准则)。那些作弊的人在不诚实地行为之后更有可能忘记道德规则,尽管他们同样有可能记住与道德无关的信息(实验 1)。此外,尽管有金钱激励来准确回忆规则,人们只有在可以作弊之后才会表现出道德遗忘,而不是在作弊之前(实验 2)。最后,道德遗忘似乎是由于作弊后道德规则的获取减少所致(实验 4)。