One of the Psychological fact is that the "people who maintain cleanliness are less severe in moral judgments".
Image Source: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/204670
We might like to think that our judgments are always well
thought-out, but research suggests that our moral judgments are often based on
intuition. Our emotions seem to drive our intuitions, giving us the gut feeling
that something is 'right' or 'wrong.' In some cases, however, we seem to be
able to override these initial reactions.
Matthew Feinberg and colleagues hypothesized that this
might be the result of reappraisal, a process by which we dampen the intensity
of our emotions by focusing on an intellectual description of why we are
experiencing the emotion.
Across several studies, participants read stories
describing moral dilemmas involving behaviors participants would probably find
disgusting. Participants who reappraised the scenarios logically were less
likely to make intuition-based moral judgments. These findings suggest that
although our emotional reactions elicit moral intuitions, these emotions can
also be regulated.
"In this way," the researchers write, "we
are both slave and master, with the capacity to be controlled by, but also
shape, our emotion-laden judgmental processes."
You See, the Ends Don't Justify the Means: Visual Imagery
Influences Moral Judgment
In comics, superheroes are often forced by a villain to
choose between saving a single person (usually their lover) or many innocent
people. The villain expects the superhero either to make a deontological choice
(it's wrong to sacrifice one for many) or a utilitarian choice (it's better to
save more people). Most people (including superheroes) tend to use their
imagination to visualize difficult scenarios.
To investigate what role visual imagery plays in moral
judgment, researchers Elinor Amit and Joshua Greene tested whether volunteers
were more visually or verbally oriented, then presented them with moral
dilemmas. Visually oriented people were more likely to make deontological
judgments, focusing on the one above the many. This is probably because they
were more prone to visualize the harm being caused. So imagination can
influence a person's moral judgment, though superheroes often use it to find a
third option to thwart the villain.
Post a Comment