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道德评价指导直观的法律判断。

Moral appraisals guide intuitive legal determinations.

机构信息

School of Law and Criminology.

Law School.

出版信息

Law Hum Behav. 2023 Apr;47(2):367-383. doi: 10.1037/lhb0000527.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

We sought to understand how basic competencies in moral reasoning influence the application of private, institutional, and legal rules.

HYPOTHESES

We predicted that moral appraisals, implicating both outcome-based and mental state reasoning, would shape participants' interpretation of rules and statutes-and asked whether these effects arise differentially under intuitive and reflective reasoning conditions.

METHOD

In six vignette-based experiments (total N = 2,473; 293 university law students [67% women; age bracket mode: 18-22 years] and 2,180 online workers [60% women; mean age = 31.9 years]), participants considered a wide range of written rules and laws and determined whether a protagonist had violated the rule in question. We manipulated morally relevant aspects of each incident-including the valence of the rule's purpose (Study 1) and of the outcomes that ensued (Studies 2 and 3), as well as the protagonist's accompanying mental state (Studies 5 and 6). In two studies, we simultaneously varied whether participants decided under time pressure or following a forced delay (Studies 4 and 6).

RESULTS

Moral appraisals of the rule's purpose, the agent's extraneous blameworthiness, and the agent's epistemic state impacted legal determinations and helped to explain participants' departure from rules' literal interpretation. Counter-literal verdicts were stronger under time pressure and were weakened by the opportunity to reflect.

CONCLUSIONS

Under intuitive reasoning conditions, legal determinations draw on core competencies in moral cognition, such as outcome-based and mental state reasoning. In turn, cognitive reflection dampens these effects on statutory interpretation, allowing text to play a more influential role. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

摘要

目的

我们试图了解道德推理的基本能力如何影响私人、机构和法律规则的应用。

假设

我们预测,道德评价,既包括基于结果的推理,也包括心理状态推理,将影响参与者对规则和法规的解释——并询问这些影响是否在直觉和反思推理条件下存在差异。

方法

在六个基于情景的实验中(总 N = 2473;293 名大学法律系学生[67%为女性;年龄范围模式:18-22 岁]和 2180 名在线工作者[60%为女性;平均年龄 = 31.9 岁]),参与者考虑了广泛的书面规则和法律,并确定主角是否违反了相关规则。我们操纵了每个事件中与道德相关的方面,包括规则目的的价值(研究 1)和随之而来的结果(研究 2 和 3),以及主角伴随的心理状态(研究 5 和 6)。在两项研究中,我们同时改变了参与者是在时间压力下还是在强制延迟后做出决定(研究 4 和 6)。

结果

对规则目的、代理人额外的可责备性以及代理人的认知状态的道德评价影响了法律判断,并有助于解释参与者对规则的字面解释的偏离。在时间压力下,违反字面规定的判决更强烈,而通过反思的机会则削弱了这些判决。

结论

在直觉推理条件下,法律判断依赖于道德认知的核心能力,如基于结果的推理和心理状态推理。反过来,认知反思抑制了这些对法规解释的影响,使文本发挥更具影响力的作用。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。

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