“…Research within our lab suggests that disgust in response to non-bodily violations is more related to anger than disgust in response to bodily-moral violations, even if it may not be completely explicable by the metaphorical use of "disgust" to mean "anger." Our general finding is that non-bodily violations may appear to cause an increase in the use of the word "disgust," its synonyms, and other expressions of disgust, but when anger is controlled for, this increase is greatly reduced (Giner-Sorolla, Bosson, Caswell, & Hettinger, in press ;Gutierrez & Giner-Sorolla, 2007;Gutierrez, Giner-Sorolla, & Vasiljevic, 2012;Russell & Giner-Sorolla, 2011a). By contrast, bodily violations show an increase in reports of disgust even when anger is controlled for, and disgust in this context shows unique characteristics, such as inflexibility and lack of external justifications (Russell & Giner-Sorolla, 2011b c).…”