Reexamining the role of intent in moral judgements of purity violations

Tom R. Kupfer*, Yoel Inbar, Joshua M. Tybur

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Perceived intent is a pivotal factor in moral judgement: intentional moral violations are considered more morally wrong than accidental ones. However, a body of recent research argues that intent is less important for moral judgements of impure acts – that it, those acts that are condemned because they elicit disgust. But the literature supporting this claim is limited in multiple ways. We conducted a new test of the hypothesis that condemnation of purity violations operates independently from intent. In Study 1, participants judged the wrongness of moral violations that were either intentional or unintentional and were either harmful (e.g., stealing) or impure (e.g., public defecation). Results revealed a large effect of intent on moral wrongness ratings that did not vary across harmful and disgusting scenarios. In Study 2, a registered report, participants judged the wrongness of disgust-eliciting moral violations that were either mundane and dyadic (e.g., serving contaminated food) or abnormal and self-directed (e.g., consuming urine). Results revealed a large effect of intent on moral wrongness judgements that did not vary across mundane and abnormal scenarios. Findings challenge the claim that moral judgements about purity violations rely upon unique psychological mechanisms that are insensitive to information about the wrongdoer's mental state.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104043
Pages (from-to)1-8
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Experimental Social Psychology
Volume91
Early online date21 Aug 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2020

Funding

This work was supported by European Research Council grants to Tom R. Kupfer ( MSCA-IF-2017-800096-EmoPun ) and Joshua Tybur ( StG-2015-680002-HBIS ).

FundersFunder number
Joshua Tybur
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme680002, 800096
European Research CouncilMSCA-IF-2017-800096-EmoPun

    Keywords

    • Harm
    • Intent
    • Moral judgement
    • Pathogen disgust
    • Purity

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