2020
DOI: 10.1177/1745691620904083
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The Importance of Context in Moral Judgments

Abstract: There is a gap between morality as experienced and morality as studied. In our personal and professional lives, moral judgments are embedded within a specific context. We know the who, what, where, and when and often can infer the why; we know the broader context of actions; and we may have a specific relationship with the actors. However, scholarly theorizing is often built on inferences from participants’ responses to decontextualized, impoverished stimuli. In our quest for uncovering general psychological t… Show more

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Cited by 118 publications
(101 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
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“…Proponents of TDM argue that even in ostensibly harmless moral transgressions people perceive harm (Gray et al, 2014), and that this perception of harm is what guides participants judgments in moral dumbfounding scenarios (Schein, 2020;Schein & Gray, 2018). Dumbfounding is displayed when people maintain a moral judgment in the absence of a means of justifying their judgment, usually evoked by vignettes of supposedly "harmless wrongs" such as consensual incest or cannibalism of an already-dead body (Haidt et al, 2000;McHugh et al, 2017).…”
Section: Theory Of Dyadic Moralitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Proponents of TDM argue that even in ostensibly harmless moral transgressions people perceive harm (Gray et al, 2014), and that this perception of harm is what guides participants judgments in moral dumbfounding scenarios (Schein, 2020;Schein & Gray, 2018). Dumbfounding is displayed when people maintain a moral judgment in the absence of a means of justifying their judgment, usually evoked by vignettes of supposedly "harmless wrongs" such as consensual incest or cannibalism of an already-dead body (Haidt et al, 2000;McHugh et al, 2017).…”
Section: Theory Of Dyadic Moralitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…MJAC assumes that moral judgments are dynamical and context-dependent, and as such it is the approach that is best positioned to understand the diverse contextual influences on moral judgment. It is beyond the scope of the current paper to describe and account for all the known contextual influences on moral judgment (e.g., an incomplete list would include: Bostyn et al(e.g., an incomplete list would include: Bostyn et al, 2018;Christensen et al, 2014;Christensen & Gomila, 2012;Costa et al, 2014;Cushman et al, 2012;Everett et al, 2016Everett et al, , 2018Forbes, 2018;Francis et al, 2016Francis et al, , 2017Lee & Holyoak, 2020;Petrinovich & O'Neill, 1996;Rozin et al, 1999Rozin et al, , 2008Schein, 2020;Timmons & Byrne, 2019;Uhlmann et al, 2015;Valdesolo & DeSteno, 2006;Vasquez et al, 2001;Vasudev & Hummel, 1987). However, MJAC predicts understanding these diverse context effects depends on (a) accounting the learning history (e.g., in the cases of emotional influences and the foreign language effect) and, (b)…”
Section: Emotion Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A number of theorists have highlighted relational context as likely to be important for understanding moral judgment and behavior (9,11,(14)(15)(16)(17). In line with these developments, there is now a small but growing empirical literature which explores how moral judgments vary across different types of social relationships (18)(19)(20)(21)(22)(23)(24)(25)(26)(27)(28)(29)(30)(31).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%