Department of Psychology, Gosslerstr. 14, Göttingen 37073, Germany.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2013 Jan;39(1):237-52. doi: 10.1037/a0028641. Epub 2012 Jun 11.
A heavily disputed question of moral philosophy is whether spatial distance between agent and victim is normatively relevant for the degree of obligation to help strangers in need. In this research, we focus on the associated descriptive question whether increased distance does in fact reduce individuals' sense of helping obligation. One problem with empirically answering this question is that physical proximity is typically confounded with other factors, such as informational directness, shared group membership, or increased efficaciousness. In a series of 5 experiments, we show that distance per se does not influence people's moral intuitions when it is isolated from such confounds. We support our claims with both frequentist and Bayesian statistics. We relate these findings to philosophical arguments concerning the normative relevance of distance and to psychological theories linking distance cues to higher level social cognition. The effects of joint versus separate evaluation paradigms on moral judgments are also discussed.
道德哲学中一个备受争议的问题是,施助者与受害者之间的空间距离是否对帮助有需要的陌生人的义务程度具有规范相关性。在这项研究中,我们专注于相关的描述性问题,即距离的增加是否实际上会降低个体的帮助义务感。实证回答这个问题的一个问题是,物理距离通常与其他因素(例如信息直接性、共同的群体成员身份或增加的效力)混淆在一起。在一系列 5 项实验中,我们表明,当距离与其混淆因素分离时,它本身并不会影响人们的道德直觉。我们使用频率论和贝叶斯统计学来支持我们的主张。我们将这些发现与关于距离的规范相关性的哲学论点以及将距离线索与更高层次的社会认知联系起来的心理学理论联系起来。还讨论了联合评估与单独评估范式对道德判断的影响。