The Johns Hopkins Carey Business School.
Wake Forest University.
J Pers. 2017 Aug;85(4):505-517. doi: 10.1111/jopy.12256. Epub 2016 May 14.
Although individual differences in the application of moral principles, such as utilitarianism, have been documented, so too have powerful context effects-effects that raise doubts about the durability of people's moral principles. In this article, we examine the robustness of individual differences in moral judgment by examining them across time and across different decision contexts. In Study 1, consistency in utilitarian judgment of 122 adult participants was examined over two different survey sessions. In Studies 2A and 2B, large samples (Ns = 130 and 327, respectively) of adult participants made a series of 32 moral judgments across eight different contexts that are known to affect utilitarian endorsement. Contrary to some contemporary theorizing, our results reveal a strong degree of consistency in moral judgment. Across time and experimental manipulations of context, individuals maintained their relative standing on utilitarianism, and aggregated moral decisions reached levels of near-perfect consistency. Results support the view that on at least one dimension (utilitarianism), people's moral judgments are robustly consistent, with context effects tailoring the application of principles to the particulars of any given moral judgment.
尽管个人在应用道德原则(如功利主义)方面存在差异已被记录在案,但强大的情境效应——这些效应让人对人们道德原则的持久性产生怀疑——也是如此。在本文中,我们通过跨时间和不同决策情境来检验道德判断的个体差异的稳健性。在研究 1 中,我们在两个不同的调查会议上检查了 122 名成年参与者在功利判断上的一致性。在研究 2A 和 2B 中,我们对大量成年参与者(分别为 130 名和 327 名)进行了 32 项道德判断,这些判断跨越了八个已知会影响功利主义支持的不同情境。与一些当代理论相反,我们的结果显示出道德判断具有很强的一致性。无论时间如何变化,也无论情境如何变化,个体都保持了他们在功利主义上的相对地位,并且聚合的道德决策达到了近乎完美的一致性。研究结果支持了这样一种观点,即至少在一个维度(功利主义)上,人们的道德判断是稳健一致的,情境效应使原则的应用适应任何特定道德判断的具体情况。