The Sacred and the Secular Douglas Medin Northwestern University With the following key people Dan...

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The Sacred and the Secular

Douglas Medin

Northwestern University

With the following key people

Dan Bartels, Rumen Iliev, Sonya Sachdeva,

Will Bennis, Scott Atran, Jeremy Ginges

Overview

1. How is morally-motivated decision making similar to or different from secular decision making?

2. What do we know about the special case of so-called sacred or protected values?

Semantic Side of Decisions

In addition to the concrete outcomes, decisions convey information to others and to oneself concerning values, goals and the like. A 2-component view:

1. Instrumental, involving probabilities and utilities associated with outcomes

2. Symbolic, expressive or meaning component that may be linked to identity

Special Case: Sacred or protected values

Tetlock: ”Any value that a moral community implicitly or explicitly treats as possessing infinite or transcendental significance that precludes comparisons, tradeoffs or indeed any other mingling with bounded or secular values”

Protected Values

1. Resist tradeoffs—especially between the sacred and the secular

2. Quantity Insensitivity---e.g. harming one is no less wrong than harming five

3. Involve deontological rather than consequentialist decision rules (e.g. do no harm; do it because it’s the right thing to do regardless of the consequences).

Baron, Ritov and others

Protected values and omission bias:

Example: disease threatens to kill 1000 children but there is a vaccine that can prevent deaths but sometimes causes deaths. What’s the highest number of deaths you would allow from the vaccine and still go ahead with it?

Typical Results

1. People with protected values have lower thresholds (are less willing to make tradeoffs).

2. People with protected values are more likely to give a zero response (not willing to trade off at all)

Prevailing View

1. Sacred values get in the way of making the tradeoffs that inevitably must occur.

2. Sacred values may be associated with “posturing” and may be only “pseudo-sacred.”

An alternative view

1. Maybe sacred or protected values have some function

2. We should be suspicious of generalizing from results with undergraduates in fairly restricted and artificial paradigms.

Further aspects of sacred values

• Privileged link to emotions

• Bound to notions of identity and trust

• Often have a strong inter-personal component

Bartels and Medin(2007)

Comparison of Baron and Ritov’s methods with those modeled after Connolly and Reb (2003)

Baron and Ritov: As a result of a dam on a river, 20 species of fish are threatened with extinction. By opening the dam for a month each year, you can save these species, but 2 species downstream will become extinct because of the changing water level.

Would you open the dam? Y N

What is the largest number of species made extinct by the opening at which you would open the dam?__________

Connolly and Reb: As a result of a dam on a river, 20 species of fish are threatened with extinction. By opening the dam for a month each year, you can save these species, but some species downstream will become extinct because of the changing water level.

Would you open the dam if it would kill 2 species of fish downstream as a result? Y NWould you open the dam if it would kill 6 species of fish downstream as a result? Y NWould you open the dam if it would kill 10 species of fish downstream as a result? Y NWould you open the dam if it would kill 14 species of fish downstream as a result? Y NWould you open the dam if it would kill 18 species of fish downstream as a result? Y N

River Item

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

No-PV PV

Qu

antS

ens

(+/-

SE

M)

ConnollyReb

RitovBaron

Followup with jihadists (with Scott Atran and Jeremy Ginges)

Does God love the martyr

Kills one ten

Less? 13 12

More? 0 38

Approve ten hundred

Less? 13 21

More? 1 39

Further Cognitive Consequences of Sacred Values

Rumen Iliev

The area of decision making has more or less neglected cognitive processes and mental representations

Consequences for conjunction fallacy and effects of an irrelevant anchor

Predictions and Results:Cognitive properties of SVs

1. Greater conjunction fallacy for relevant information

2. Smaller effect of an irrelevant anchor

3. From a Stroop task (say the color in which a word is printed and not the word itself). Larger Stroop effect for value-related words and better incidental memory for value-related words

Some followup studies

Context effects on judgment

Attraction effect and Compromise effect

Dimensions = moral values such as a plan that prevents 10 species from extinction and saves 100 children from starving

Attraction Effect

• Two alternative choice set

• P(2)<P(3)

Attraction Effect

• Two alternative choice setP(2)<P(3)

• Three alternative choice set (1 is a decoy)

• Decoy increases choices of 2

Compromise effect

• Pick 2,3 so people are indifferent

• 2 becomes a compromise when 1 is added

• Compromise = more choices of 2

Results so far

Moral values are associated with clear attraction effects

Compromise effects absent or weak

No evidence that SV versus no-SV changes results

Interim Summary

Two keys properties of SVs--tradeoff reluctance and insensitivity to quantity, are undermined by these studies.

The sensitivity of SVs to attentional manipulations and context effects is a challenge to understanding processes associated with moral judgment

Other Challenges

1. How do sacred values help us understand (intra- and inter-) group formation, cooperation, and conflict?

2. How can we bridge between basic research conducted under artificial, (over) simplified conditions and real practical problems.

Example from field research in northeast Wisconsin

• Participants: Members of various cultural groups in two neighboring counties, including – Native Americans living on the Menominee

reservation,– Evangelical Christians living in neighboring

Shawano county,– Avid hunters and fishers (in both locations).

Scenarios

1. Requiring Native Americans to give up tribal regulation of fishing and hunting practices.

2. Allowing public schools to teach secular (non-religious) evolutionary theory in science class, but not a Christian perspective on creation.

3. Allowing the mother and family to decide whether or not to have an abortion in cases where she would almost certainly lose her life delivering the child.

4. Allowing farmers to use fertilizers that pose a very small risk of groundwater contamination if they dramatically increase the yield of a large field.

Participants asked to indicate agreement with 2 statements

1. “This is the kind of decision where it's best to rely on moral rules of right and wrong”

2. “This is the kind of decision where it's best to [weigh the costs & benefits/pros & cons]”

7 pt. Likert scale, 7 = completely agreeAverage across scenarios

(All four scenarios had the same cross-over pattern). “This is the type of decision where it’s…

p < .001

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

"This is the type of decision where it's best to relyon moral rules"

"This is the type of decision where it's best toweigh the costs & benefits"

SV="No"

SV="Yes"

…But…people with SVs believe relying on

moral rules helps them improve consequences:

Relationship between the endorsement of two statements:

a. “This is the kind of decision where it’s best to rely on moral rules of right and wrong”

b. “This is the kind of decision where relying on moral rules of right and wrong will lead to better long-term consequences.”

r = 0.74

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

"This is the kind of decision where it's best torely on moral rules of right and wrong."

"This is the kind of decision where relying onmoral rules of right and wrong will lead to better

long-term consequences."

SV="No"

SV="Yes"

Why might Ps think relying on moral rules works better than weighing costs & benefits?

• Consequentialism is only as good as our ability to accurately anticipate consequences

(research suggests people are not good at this)

• Decision researchers tend to make a number of “closed-world” assumptions: That Ps will and should limit the information they

use to that provided in the scenario itself (i.e., they will not use experience or knowledge they bring to scenario).

Other Field Studies

Middle-East

Palestinian refugees and displaced Israeli Settlers reasoning about potential peace agreements with sacred (e.g. right of return, recognition of Israel) and secular (the UN offers 10 billion a year in aid) components

“Taboo versus Taboo+ versus Symbolic”

Palestinian recognition of the “sacred right” of Israel

-8-6-4-202468

10

Taboo Taboo+

Per

cen

t su

ppo

rt f

or v

iole

nce

Non Absolutists Moral Absolutistsb

Compromising Palestinian sovereignty over East Jerusalem

-12-10

-8-6-4-202468

10

Taboo Taboo+

perc

ent s

uppo

rt fo

r vi

olen

ce

Non Absolutists Moral Absolutistsd

Moral absolutist Israeli “settlers”

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

ang

er o

r d

isg

ust

Taboo Symbolic

-14-12-10

-8-6-4-20246

per

cen

t su

pp

ort

fo

r vi

ole

nce

Taboo Symbolic

a b

Moral absolutist Palestinian “refugees”

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

"jo

y" a

bo

ut

suic

ide

atta

cks

Taboo Symbolic

-3-2-1012345678

per

cen

t su

pp

ort

fo

r vi

ole

nce

Taboo Symbolic

c d

Studies in Guatemala

Original work by Atran, Medin et al

Itza’ Maya and the forest spirits—sacred values promote sustainability

Ladino---forest spirits play no such role

Next Generation follow up work by Iliev, Medin, LeGuinn and Atran

Social network distance correlated with values from God’s perspective

Expert network distance correlated with values from the forest spirit perspective

Itza’ Maya (and Ladino) personal values shift from being aligned with forest spirits to cash value and God…..Maya notion of forest spirits replaced by Ladino concepts

Forest itself—much more degraded

Work in Northern India by Sachdeva, Medin and Ginges

Clash between Hindu fundamentalists and Muslims over sacred site of ancient temple and mosque (Ayodhya/Faizabad) and Kashmir

More or less replicate Ginges et al that sacred and secular do not mix….more detailed ethnography

Where did I go?

Faizabad/ Ayodhya

Delhi

The Babri Masjid/ Ram Janmbhoomi debate

• Hindus believe this land to be the birthplace of an holy incarnation, Ram.

• Muslims believe this land to be a mark of the first Mughal emperor to conquer India, Babar.

• December, 1992 - thousands of Hindu fundamentalists broke down all the security placed around this site in 1990 and tore the Babri Masjid down.

This sparked the worst riots seen in India between Hindus and Muslims since the partition.

Kashmir Issue

• Began with the struggle for Muslim autonomy in the newly independent India and lead to the partition and creation of Pakistan

• Kashmir’s Maharaja sought Indian assistance in 1947 when it was invaded by tribes people from Pakistan

Three wars have been fought over KashmirCurrently, India holds two-thirds of Kashmir while

Pakistan holds the rest

Again scenarios with Taboo, Taboo+ and Symbolic Tradeoffs

Results

Deals with symbolic concessions are better than taboo tradeoffs

Taboo+ backfires for Hindu fundamentalists

for the sacred site of Ram’s birth and for

Muslims for Kashmir

But for the other two combinations of scenarios and groups secular concessions may help (analyzing interviews currently)

Why are these two sites of interest?

Guatemala work shows the unraveling of a sacred value

Northern India shows how sacred values may be recruited over time (e.g. the elevation of the God Ram) with violent consequences—destruction of the mosque in 1992 and associated killing that go on to this day

Challenges

Building Models that address the role of sacred values on moral decision making (see progress by Forbus group), partly because we need a deeper understanding of SVs and partly because they may vary with cultural contexts.

With respect to the latter we need to know more about the link between SVs and action (e.g. Amish vs. Fundamentalists)

End

Protected Values

Anti-abortion versus Women’s right to choose

Conjunction Fallacy:All three scenarios

0

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0.9

1

Neutrla Pro-life Pro-choice

Scenarios

Pro

port

ion

of C

onju

nctio

n Fa

llacy

No PV

PV

Other Results

Larger Stroop for value-relevant words

Better incidental recall of words

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Taboo Tragic

Tradeoff Type

Lik

eli

ness t

o V

ote

fo

r D

eal

Likeliness toVote

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Taboo Tragic

Tradeoff Type

% A

pp

rova

l

Approval

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

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0.8

0.9

1.0

Taboo Tragic

Tradeoff Type

% R

epo

rtin

g A

ng

er

Anger

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1.0

Taboo Tragic

% P

red

icti

ng

Rio

tin

g

Riots

Babri Masjid - Symbolic Tradeoffs Across Various Dependent Measures

Sacred Values

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

1 2

Tradeoff Type

Lik

elin

es

s t

o V

ote

fo

r D

ea

l

No SV

SV

n=3

n=13

n=2

n=7

Taboo Taboo+0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Taboo Tragic

Tradeoff Type

Lik

elin

es

s t

o V

ote

fo

r D

ea

l

No SV

SV

F=4.02, p =.06, η2=.15

n = 3

n = 16

n = 1n = 7

Symbolic Tradeoffs Taboo+ Tradeoffs

Acceptability of Deal by Religion

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

Taboo Taboo+

Tradeoff Type

Lik

elin

ess

to V

ote

Hindu

Muslim

F = 3.07, p = .09, η2 =.12

n=8

n=10

n=7

n=2

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Taboo Tragic

Tradeoff Type

Lik

eli

ne

ss

to

Vo

te

Hindu

Muslim

n = 8

n = 2

n = 7

n = 10

Symbolic Tradeoffs Taboo+ Tradeoffs

Likeliness to Vote for Trade-off Deals by Religion and Sacred Values

Kashmir Scenario

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Hindu Muslim

Religion

NSV

SV

Babri Masjid Scenario

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

4.5

5

Hindu Muslim

Religion

NSV

SV

Summary – Kashmir Scenario

• Suggest that Muslim participants are, in fact, more sensitive to changes in trade-off type than Hindu participants in this scenario

• In the Kashmir scenario, Muslim participants with sacred values are less approving of any trade-off deal than Muslim participants without sacred values. However, in in the Babri Masjid scenario, this result is reversed.

• Different degrees of sacred values– Kashmir issue resonates with the Muslim identity which is even

stronger for most Indian Muslim participants than their national identity - therefore stronger attachment to this issue (negative correlation between feelings on Kashmir and Babri Masjid issue)

– The Babri Masjid issue is more relevant for the Hindu nationalist identity (strong positive correlation between Kashmir and Babri Masjid issue)

Likeliness to Vote

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Hindu Muslim

Religion

Taboo

Tragic

Approval of Deal

00.10.20.30.40.50.60.70.80.9

1

Hindu Muslim

Religion

% A

pp

rov

al

Taboo

Tragic

Anger

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

Hindu Muslim

Religion

% R

epo

rtin

g A

ng

er

Taboo

Tragic

Kashmir Scenario – Symbolic Tradeoffs by Religion

Rioting

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

Hindu Muslim

Religion

% P

red

icti

ng

Rio

tin

g

Taboo

Tragic

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