Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Kindness or fairness: prosociality and fairness jointly modulate moral judgments
View through CrossRef
This study explores how third-party judges weigh the importance of prosociality and fairness when making judgments on complex moral decisions that encompass both elements, and the role of social distance between the judge and the decision-maker in this process. In the experiments, participants acted as third-party observers, watching decisions made by decision-makers in complex moral tasks and evaluating their moral levels. The tasks completed by the decision-makers involved distributing tokens between themselves and others (prosociality) and allocating tokens given to others between two recipients (fairness). The results showed that: 1) the effects of prosociality and fairness on moral judgments are not independent but interactive. Under high prosocial conditions, the difference in moral ratings between fair and unfair decisions is significantly greater than that under low prosocial conditions; at the neural level, the amplitudes of EEG components FRN and P3 exhibit patterns consistent with behavior; 2) when judging highly prosocial but unfair decisions, as the social distance between the decision-maker and the participant decreases, the participant's moral rating of the decision decreases, but their willingness to cooperate increases, demonstrating a dissociation between moral rating and willingness to cooperate. This study suggests that in judging complex moral decisions with multiple components, prosociality and fairness are not independent but interactively influence judgments together. The study reveals the flexibility of moral judgments and the interactions between various moral factors, providing new insights into the psychological mechanisms of complex moral judgments in different social contexts.
Title: Kindness or fairness: prosociality and fairness jointly modulate moral judgments
Description:
This study explores how third-party judges weigh the importance of prosociality and fairness when making judgments on complex moral decisions that encompass both elements, and the role of social distance between the judge and the decision-maker in this process.
In the experiments, participants acted as third-party observers, watching decisions made by decision-makers in complex moral tasks and evaluating their moral levels.
The tasks completed by the decision-makers involved distributing tokens between themselves and others (prosociality) and allocating tokens given to others between two recipients (fairness).
The results showed that: 1) the effects of prosociality and fairness on moral judgments are not independent but interactive.
Under high prosocial conditions, the difference in moral ratings between fair and unfair decisions is significantly greater than that under low prosocial conditions; at the neural level, the amplitudes of EEG components FRN and P3 exhibit patterns consistent with behavior; 2) when judging highly prosocial but unfair decisions, as the social distance between the decision-maker and the participant decreases, the participant's moral rating of the decision decreases, but their willingness to cooperate increases, demonstrating a dissociation between moral rating and willingness to cooperate.
This study suggests that in judging complex moral decisions with multiple components, prosociality and fairness are not independent but interactively influence judgments together.
The study reveals the flexibility of moral judgments and the interactions between various moral factors, providing new insights into the psychological mechanisms of complex moral judgments in different social contexts.
Related Results
Kindness or fairness: prosociality and fairness jointly modulate moral judgments
Kindness or fairness: prosociality and fairness jointly modulate moral judgments
This study explores how third-party judges weigh the importance of prosociality and fairness when making judgments on complex moral decisions that encompass both elements, and the ...
Patterns and Possibilities: Exploring the Meaning of Kindness
Patterns and Possibilities: Exploring the Meaning of Kindness
Abstract
In this chapter, authors take a narrative/interpretive approach by sharing insights from millennials and Generation Z as to the definition of kindness as...
A Critique of Principlism
A Critique of Principlism
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash
INTRODUCTION
Bioethics does not have an explicitly stated and agreed upon means of resolving conflicts between normative theories. As such, b...
Escaping the Shadow
Escaping the Shadow
Photo by Karl Raymund Catabas on Unsplash
The interests of patients at most levels of policymaking are represented by a disconnected patchwork of groups … “After Buddha was dead, ...
Moral Epistemology
Moral Epistemology
Moral epistemology is the study of moral knowledge and related phenomena. The recorded history of work in the field extends (at least) 2,500 years to Socrates’s inquiries into whet...
Algorithmic Individual Fairness and Healthcare: A Scoping Review
Algorithmic Individual Fairness and Healthcare: A Scoping Review
AbstractObjectiveStatistical and artificial intelligence algorithms are increasingly being developed for use in healthcare. These algorithms may reflect biases that magnify dispari...
Does observability affect prosociality?
Does observability affect prosociality?
The observation of behaviour is a key theoretical parameter underlying a number of models of prosociality. However, the empirical findings showing the effect of observability on pr...
Ordinary ethical navigation. An account of moral understanding
Ordinary ethical navigation. An account of moral understanding
This dissertation defends an account of moral understanding as the competence to navigate ethical life. The nature of moral understanding is an object of controversy. Some claim th...

