Is it fair to kill one to save five? How just world beliefs shape sacrificial moral decision-making

Paul Conway*, Rael J. Dawtry, Jason Lam, Ana Gheorghiu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Sacrificing a target to save a group violates deontological ethics against harm but upholds utilitarian ethics to maximize outcomes. Although theorists examine many factors that influence dilemma decisions, we examined justice concerns: We manipulated the moral character of sacrificial targets, then measured participants' dilemma responses and just world beliefs. Across four studies (N=1116), participants considering guilty versus innocent targets scored lower on harm-rejection (deontological) responding, but not outcome-maximizing (utilitarian) responding assessed via process dissociation. Just world beliefs (both personal and general) predicted lower utilitarian and somewhat lower deontological responding, but these effects disappeared when accounting for shared variance with psychopathy. Results suggest that dilemma decisions partly reflect the moral status of sacrificial targets and concerns about the fairness implications of sacrificing innocent targets to save innocent groups.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages18
JournalPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Early online date25 Oct 2024
DOIs
Publication statusEarly online - 25 Oct 2024

Keywords

  • moral dilemmas
  • just world beliefs
  • process dissociation
  • person perception
  • morality

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