Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
947995 Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 2011 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Public outrage is often triggered by “immaterially” harmful acts (i.e., acts with relatively negligible consequences). A well-known example involves corporate salaries and perks: they generate public outrage yet their financial cost is relatively minor. The present research explains this paradox by appealing to a person-centered approach to moral judgment. Strong moral reactions can occur when relatively harmless acts provide highly diagnostic information about moral character. Studies 1a and 1b first demonstrate dissociation between moral evaluations of persons and their actions—although violence toward a human was viewed as a more blameworthy act than violence toward an animal, the latter was viewed as more revealing of bad moral character. Study 2 then shows that person-centered cues directly influence moral judgments—participants preferred to hire a more expensive CEO when the alternative candidate requested a frivolous perk as part of his compensation package, an effect mediated by the informativeness of his request.

Research highlights► We examined if moral evaluations of persons can be dissociated from evaluations of specific acts. ► Causing harm to a human was viewed as a worse act than causing harm to an animal. ► Causing harm to a human was viewed as less diagnostic of character than causing harm to an animal. ► Informative acts also directly influenced moral judgments and decisions. ► Participants avoided hiring a CEO who requested a frivolous compensation package.

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