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When virtue leads to villainy: advances in research on moral self-licensing

When virtue leads to villainy: advances in research on moral self-licensing
When virtue leads to villainy: advances in research on moral self-licensing
Acting virtuously can subsequently free people to act less-than-virtuously. We review recent insights into this moral self-licensing effect: first, it is reliable, though modestly sized, and occurs in both real-world and laboratory contexts; second, planning to do good, reflecting on foregone bad deeds, or observing ingroup members’ good deeds is sufficient to license less virtuous behavior; third, when people need a license, they can create one by strategically acting or planning to act more virtuously, exaggerating the sinfulness of foregone bad deeds, or reinterpreting past behavior as moral credentials; and fourth, moral self-licensing effects seem most likely to occur when people interpret their virtuous behavior as demonstrating their lack of immorality but not signaling that morality is a core part of their self-concept.
2352-250X
32-35
Effron, Daniel A.
1aca0bbd-0988-494d-949f-123ca10d2c5d
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Effron, Daniel A.
1aca0bbd-0988-494d-949f-123ca10d2c5d
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286

Effron, Daniel A. and Conway, Paul (2015) When virtue leads to villainy: advances in research on moral self-licensing. Current Opinion in Psychology, 6, 32-35. (doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.03.017).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Acting virtuously can subsequently free people to act less-than-virtuously. We review recent insights into this moral self-licensing effect: first, it is reliable, though modestly sized, and occurs in both real-world and laboratory contexts; second, planning to do good, reflecting on foregone bad deeds, or observing ingroup members’ good deeds is sufficient to license less virtuous behavior; third, when people need a license, they can create one by strategically acting or planning to act more virtuously, exaggerating the sinfulness of foregone bad deeds, or reinterpreting past behavior as moral credentials; and fourth, moral self-licensing effects seem most likely to occur when people interpret their virtuous behavior as demonstrating their lack of immorality but not signaling that morality is a core part of their self-concept.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 11 June 2015
Published date: 1 December 2015
Additional Information: Validate as is with no acceptance date, pre-2016 so no full text

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 473379
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473379
ISSN: 2352-250X
PURE UUID: 124ec19f-b956-4937-8491-143ba7bee72d
ORCID for Paul Conway: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4649-6008

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Date deposited: 17 Jan 2023 17:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17

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Contributors

Author: Daniel A. Effron
Author: Paul Conway ORCID iD

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