“…Thereafter, we describe how this approach may be able to illuminate the nature of complex moral phenomena that lie at the boundary of two areas of moral cognition: person-centered morality (Alicke, Mandel, Hilton, Gerstenberg, & Lagnado, 2015;Knobe, 2010;Tannenbaum, Uhlmann, & Diermeier, 2011;Uhlmann, Pizarro, & Diermeier, 2015), moral hypocrisy (Batson, Kobrynowicz, Dinnerstein, Kampf, & Wilson, 1997;Gino, Norton, & Weber, 2016;Graham, Meindl, Koleva, Iyer, & Johnson, 2015;Sharma, Mazar, Alter, & Ariely, 2014;Szabados & Soifer, 2004), and moral influence (Bandura, 1969;Cialdini & Goldstein, 2004;Hoffman, 1970;Gino, Ayal, & Ariely, 2009;Macaulay & Berkowitz, 1970;Staub, 1971). Although the illustrative examples provided in this paper are specific to just one domain of morality (i.e., harm), the approach we describe can potentially be applied to other moral domains as well.…”