“…But there are many other methodological avenues to explore and exploit as well. In addition to written vignettes, psychologists studying morality in general (not in war) have, for example, developed comprehensive image and video sets that capture the key features of moral judgment (Clifford, Iyengar, Cabeza, & Sinnott-Armstrong, 2015; Crone, Bode, Murawski, & Laham, 2017; McCurrie, Crone, Bigelow, & Laham, 2018); brain imaging techniques have been used to investigate the neural correlates of justified and unjustified harm (Domínguez et al, 2018) and moral as opposed to nonmoral cognition (Theriault, Waytz, Heiphetz, & Young, 2017); and beyond the lab, experience-sampling methods provide a snapshot of the moral judgments people make in everyday life (Bollich et al, 2016; Hofmann, Wisneski, Brandt, & Skitka, 2014). Furthermore, through conceptual analyses of anthropological, religious, and philosophical texts (Haidt & Graham, 2007; Haidt & Joseph, 2004), linguistic analyses of speeches by religious and political leaders (Graham, Haidt, & Nosek, 2009), and analyses of legal distinctions in systems of criminal law around the world (Mikhail, 2007), general models of moral judgment such as universal moral grammar (Mikhail, 2011) and moral-foundations theory (MFT; Haidt & Graham, 2004; Haidt & Joseph, 2004) have been developed.…”