The behavioral ecology of moral dilemmas: childhood unpredictability, but not harshness, predicts less deontological and utilitarian responding
The behavioral ecology of moral dilemmas: childhood unpredictability, but not harshness, predicts less deontological and utilitarian responding
Childhood unpredictability and harshness are associated with patterns of psychology and behavior that enable individuals to make the most of adverse environments. The current research assessed effects of childhood unpredictability and harshness on individual differences in sacrificial moral decision making. Six studies (N = 1,503) supported the hypothesis that childhood unpredictability, but not harshness, would be associated with fewer decisions to reject harm (consistent with deontological ethics) and to maximize overall outcomes (consistent with utilitarian ethics). These associations were not moderated by perceptions of current environmental unpredictability (Studies 3a and 3b) and were robust to potential confounds (religiosity, political conservativism, Big 5 personality traits, and social desirability; Study 5). The associations between childhood unpredictability and lower deontological and utilitarian tendencies were statistically mediated by low levels of empathic concern and poor-quality social relationships (Study 4). Findings are consistent with the possibility that early calibration to ecological unpredictability, but not harshness, undermines other-oriented psychological processes which, in turn, reduce moral concerns about harm and consequences for other people.
1696 - 1719
Maranges, Heather M.
f4626701-6ad2-4d39-8293-bdd260e4a719
Hasty, Connor R.
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Maner, Jon K.
e714c1b4-7ee5-44e7-a18d-02fc8519aead
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
28 January 2021
Maranges, Heather M.
f4626701-6ad2-4d39-8293-bdd260e4a719
Hasty, Connor R.
8db962b1-6b4d-44cf-8123-7dc2c04f0821
Maner, Jon K.
e714c1b4-7ee5-44e7-a18d-02fc8519aead
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Maranges, Heather M., Hasty, Connor R., Maner, Jon K. and Conway, Paul
(2021)
The behavioral ecology of moral dilemmas: childhood unpredictability, but not harshness, predicts less deontological and utilitarian responding.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, .
(doi:10.1037/pspp0000368).
Abstract
Childhood unpredictability and harshness are associated with patterns of psychology and behavior that enable individuals to make the most of adverse environments. The current research assessed effects of childhood unpredictability and harshness on individual differences in sacrificial moral decision making. Six studies (N = 1,503) supported the hypothesis that childhood unpredictability, but not harshness, would be associated with fewer decisions to reject harm (consistent with deontological ethics) and to maximize overall outcomes (consistent with utilitarian ethics). These associations were not moderated by perceptions of current environmental unpredictability (Studies 3a and 3b) and were robust to potential confounds (religiosity, political conservativism, Big 5 personality traits, and social desirability; Study 5). The associations between childhood unpredictability and lower deontological and utilitarian tendencies were statistically mediated by low levels of empathic concern and poor-quality social relationships (Study 4). Findings are consistent with the possibility that early calibration to ecological unpredictability, but not harshness, undermines other-oriented psychological processes which, in turn, reduce moral concerns about harm and consequences for other people.
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Published date: 28 January 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 472498
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472498
ISSN: 0022-3514
PURE UUID: fb975789-d5ef-4f17-99f3-99292187ab1d
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Date deposited: 07 Dec 2022 17:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17
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Author:
Heather M. Maranges
Author:
Connor R. Hasty
Author:
Jon K. Maner
Author:
Paul Conway
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