Paradoxical effects of power on moral thinking: Why power both increases and decreases deontological and utilitarian moral decisions
Paradoxical effects of power on moral thinking: Why power both increases and decreases deontological and utilitarian moral decisions
The current research explores the role of power in moral decision-making. Some work suggests that power increases utilitarianism; other work suggests power increases deontological judgments. Conversely, we propose that power can both increase and decrease both deontological and utilitarian decisions by building on two recent insights in moral psychology. First, we utilize the moral orientation scale to assess four thinking styles that jointly predict moral dilemma decisions. Second, we employ process dissociation to assess deontological and utilitarian judgments as orthogonal rather than opposite constructs. We conducted two preregistered confirmatory studies that replicated exploratory findings. In Study 1, power increased three moral thinking styles: integration, deliberation, and rule orientation. In Study 2, these decision-making styles simultaneously mediated the effects of power on utilitarian and deontological responses in opposing ways, leading to null effects overall. These results reconcile previous findings and demonstrate the complex yet systematic effects power has on moral decision-making.
110-120
Fleischmann, Alexandra
4b507038-7d71-4173-b3b9-f07b98f63e5c
Lammers, Joris
2ccc6d72-5266-48bf-8229-bc6b86efc2ac
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Galinsky, Adam D.
507e9c91-deab-4b92-8211-610f49c469f9
1 January 2019
Fleischmann, Alexandra
4b507038-7d71-4173-b3b9-f07b98f63e5c
Lammers, Joris
2ccc6d72-5266-48bf-8229-bc6b86efc2ac
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Galinsky, Adam D.
507e9c91-deab-4b92-8211-610f49c469f9
Fleischmann, Alexandra, Lammers, Joris, Conway, Paul and Galinsky, Adam D.
(2019)
Paradoxical effects of power on moral thinking: Why power both increases and decreases deontological and utilitarian moral decisions.
Social Psychological and Personality Science, 10 (1), .
(doi:10.1177/1948550617744022).
Abstract
The current research explores the role of power in moral decision-making. Some work suggests that power increases utilitarianism; other work suggests power increases deontological judgments. Conversely, we propose that power can both increase and decrease both deontological and utilitarian decisions by building on two recent insights in moral psychology. First, we utilize the moral orientation scale to assess four thinking styles that jointly predict moral dilemma decisions. Second, we employ process dissociation to assess deontological and utilitarian judgments as orthogonal rather than opposite constructs. We conducted two preregistered confirmatory studies that replicated exploratory findings. In Study 1, power increased three moral thinking styles: integration, deliberation, and rule orientation. In Study 2, these decision-making styles simultaneously mediated the effects of power on utilitarian and deontological responses in opposing ways, leading to null effects overall. These results reconcile previous findings and demonstrate the complex yet systematic effects power has on moral decision-making.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 December 2017
Published date: 1 January 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 473512
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473512
ISSN: 1948-5506
PURE UUID: 5d145cd2-690a-4a90-8552-0de210818daa
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Date deposited: 20 Jan 2023 18:06
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17
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Contributors
Author:
Alexandra Fleischmann
Author:
Joris Lammers
Author:
Paul Conway
Author:
Adam D. Galinsky
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