Distrusting your moral compass: the impact of distrust mindsets on moral dilemma processing and judgments
Distrusting your moral compass: the impact of distrust mindsets on moral dilemma processing and judgments
A growing literature suggests that generalized distrust mindsets encourage carefully considering alternatives—yet it remains unclear whether this pertains to moral decision making. We propose that distrust simultaneously increases opposing moral response inclinations when moral decisions pit two moral responses against one another, such as classic moral dilemmas where causing harm maximizes outcomes. Such a pattern may be invisible to conventional analytic techniques that treat dilemma response inclinations as diametric opposites. Therefore, we employed process dissociation to independently assess response inclinations underlying moral dilemma responses. Three studies demonstrated that activating generalized distrust (vs. trust and control) mindsets increased both harm avoidance and out-come-maximization response tendencies. These effects canceled out for conventional relative dilemma judgments. Moreover, perceptions of feeling torn between available response options mediated the impact of distrust on both response inclinations. These findings clarify how distrust impacts decision-making processes in the moral domain.
trust, distrust, moral judgement, dilemmas, process dissociation
345-380
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Weiss, Alexa
38d1177a-1f9e-44b3-b404-47eebb701257
Burgmer, Pascal
c8c43b56-572c-4242-800c-9f44ff648cec
Mussweiler, Thomas
cfed9b9c-d8f3-4ce0-80e1-27307c08a40c
1 June 2018
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Weiss, Alexa
38d1177a-1f9e-44b3-b404-47eebb701257
Burgmer, Pascal
c8c43b56-572c-4242-800c-9f44ff648cec
Mussweiler, Thomas
cfed9b9c-d8f3-4ce0-80e1-27307c08a40c
Conway, Paul, Weiss, Alexa, Burgmer, Pascal and Mussweiler, Thomas
(2018)
Distrusting your moral compass: the impact of distrust mindsets on moral dilemma processing and judgments.
Social Cognition, 36 (3), .
(doi:10.1521/soco.2018.36.3.345).
Abstract
A growing literature suggests that generalized distrust mindsets encourage carefully considering alternatives—yet it remains unclear whether this pertains to moral decision making. We propose that distrust simultaneously increases opposing moral response inclinations when moral decisions pit two moral responses against one another, such as classic moral dilemmas where causing harm maximizes outcomes. Such a pattern may be invisible to conventional analytic techniques that treat dilemma response inclinations as diametric opposites. Therefore, we employed process dissociation to independently assess response inclinations underlying moral dilemma responses. Three studies demonstrated that activating generalized distrust (vs. trust and control) mindsets increased both harm avoidance and out-come-maximization response tendencies. These effects canceled out for conventional relative dilemma judgments. Moreover, perceptions of feeling torn between available response options mediated the impact of distrust on both response inclinations. These findings clarify how distrust impacts decision-making processes in the moral domain.
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Published date: 1 June 2018
Keywords:
trust, distrust, moral judgement, dilemmas, process dissociation
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Local EPrints ID: 473518
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473518
ISSN: 0278-016X
PURE UUID: 159e75bd-68ee-487c-af88-f99b3d77e084
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Date deposited: 20 Jan 2023 18:06
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17
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Contributors
Author:
Paul Conway
Author:
Alexa Weiss
Author:
Pascal Burgmer
Author:
Thomas Mussweiler
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