Lin Zechuan, Cui Fengxiao, Wu Yue, Wei Qingwang
Department of Psychology, Renmin University of China, Beijing, China.
Centre for Mental Health Education, Beijing Vocational Transportation College, Beijing, China.
Front Psychol. 2024 Feb 15;15:1227961. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1227961. eCollection 2024.
Our proposition postulates that the correlation between the wrongdoer's status and the punishment suggestions of onlookers is primarily influenced by group-oriented envy rather than the ascription of intentionality and is moderated by the belief in a just world. In three separate studies, 389 university students were asked to read scenarios describing a hit-and-run crime committed by either a rich or a poor individual and then report their opinions on intentionality attribution (Study 1 and Study 2), envy emotions (Study 2), punishment recommendations (all three studies), and belief in a just world (Study 3). Consistently, the findings indicated that those observing recommended harsher penalties to be imposed upon high-status perpetrators engaging in the same wrongdoing (such as hit-and-run) as their low-status equivalents. The effect of the rich receiving more severe punishment was predicted more strongly by envious emotions than by intentionality attributions to high-status wrongdoers and was only present for those observers who endorsed a lower belief in a just world.
我们的观点假定,违法者的地位与旁观者的惩罚建议之间的关联主要受群体导向的嫉妒影响,而非意图归属,且受到对公正世界信念的调节。在三项独立研究中,389名大学生被要求阅读描述富人和穷人实施肇事逃逸犯罪的情景,然后报告他们对意图归属(研究1和研究2)、嫉妒情绪(研究2)、惩罚建议(所有三项研究)以及对公正世界信念(研究3)的看法。结果一致表明,那些观察者建议对与低地位违法者犯下相同罪行(如肇事逃逸)的高地位犯罪者施加更严厉的惩罚。富人受到更严厉惩罚的效应,由嫉妒情绪比由对高地位违法者的意图归属预测得更强,并且仅在那些认可较低公正世界信念的观察者中存在。