Psych 448 C Morality, Religion, and Justice
10/19/08
Agenda
Lecture In-class assignment Distribute study sheet
Moral Judgments and culture
Are there universal stages of moral reasoning?
Is there universal agreement on what are the most important moral principles?
Do we use our emotions or reasoning to make moral judgments?
Development of moral reasoning: Lawrence Kohlberg (1927-1987) Interested in the question of “how do we explain why something is right or
wrong?”
Developed Six Stages of Moral Development
Presented dilemmas to children & adults Most famous one: the Heinz dilemma. In Europe, a woman was near death from a special kind of
cancer. There was one drug that the doctors thought might save her. It was a form of radium that a druggist in the same town had recently discovered. the drug was expensive to make, but the druggist was charging ten times what the drug cost him to make. He paid $200 for the radium and charged $2,000 for a small dose of the drug. The sick woman's husband, Heinz, went to everyone he knew to borrow the money and tried every legal means, but he could only get together about $1,000, which is half of what it cost. He told the druggist that his wife was dying, and asked him to sell it cheaper or let him pay later. But the druggist said, "No, I discovered the drug and I'm going to make money from it." So, having tried every legal means, Heinz gets desperate and considers breaking into the man's store to steal the drug for his wife.
Interview questions: 1. Should Heinz steal the drug?
1a. Why or why not?
2. Is it actually right or wrong for him to steal the drug?
2a. Why is it right or wrong?
3. Does Heinz have a duty or obligation to steal the drug?
3a. Why or why not?
Etc.
Six Stages of Moral Development Level 1: Preconventional Needs and fears
Stage 1: fear of punishment; should obey authority “Shouldn’t steal, because Heinz will get in trouble”
Stage 2: personal interest; equal exchange & satisfying needs “Should steal, because his wife needs the medicine
more than the druggist needs money”
Level 2: Conventional Level 3: Postconventional
Six Stages of Moral Development Level 1: Preconventional
Level 2: Conventional Follow the conventions of others and society
Stage 3: Interpersonal accord and conformity; Live up to the expectations of people close to you “His family will think he’s good if he steals”
Stage 4: Social accord and system maintenance “He should follow the law, because the law is what is
right”
Level 3: Postconventional
Six Stages of Moral Development Level 1: Preconventional Level 2: Conventional
Level 3: Postconventional Universal moral principles
Stage 5: Should generally follow laws, not because they are morally right, but because they are a social contract;
Stage 6: Follow universal moral principles (of justice and individual rights), regardless of law
Stages 5 & 6 generally combined “Heinz should steal because it is always wrong to
allow a person to die when you have the power to prevent it, regardless of what the law says.”
Six Stages of Moral DevelopmentLevel 1: Preconventional Needs and fearsLevel 2: Conventional Follow the conventions of others and societyLevel 3: Postconventional Universal principles
Example: interview each other Mr. Adams is an officer on a large modern
American cargo ship in 2004. One night, while at sea, he finds a sailor drunk at a time when the sailor should have been monitoring the radar screen. After the sailor sobers up, Adams punishes the sailor by giving him 5 lashes with a whip.
Should Mr. Adams have whipped the sailor? Why or why not?
Can you think of reasons from each stage?
Based on scenario in Kelly, Stich, Haley, Eng, Fessler 2007
Are these Universal stages of moral reasoning? 1. Do all cultures have all stages?
Are these Universal stages of moral reasoning? Snarey et al. (1985)
45 studies from around the world, 26 different cultures
All urbanized cultures had at least one adult that showed postconventional reasoning Both Western and non-Western cultures To different degrees; ranging from 1 out of 20
adults in city in Turkey; to 10 out of 12 Kibbutz members (Israel)
However, NO adults in Folk / Tribal societies show any post-conventional reasoning
Are these Universal stages of moral reasoning? Snarey et al. (1985)
Are these Universal stages of moral reasoning? 1. Do all cultures have all stages?
NO. Problem with the cultures, not “developed
enough?” Or a problem with the way the stages are
defined?
Are there other postconventional principles?
Other postconventional principles? For example: Taiwan: “Joe” story
In Kohlberg’s manual, principle of “filial duty” not part of Postconventional thinking
Snarey 1985, p. 224
Richard Shweder Professor at University of Chicago
Cultural Anthropologist
Kohlberg only focusing on some moral principles? Detailed analysis of moral discourse from
residents of a north-east Indian city The “Big Three:” Ethics of Autonomy,
Community, and Divinity
The Big Three: 1. Ethic of Autonomy Issues of Harm, Rights, and Justice
Should protect the freedom of individuals as much as possible
Familiar to people in individualistic societies Would consider the following to be moral issues:
Harm: Whether or not someone cared for someone weak or vulnerable Whether or not someone was cruelFairness: Whether or not some people were treated differently than others Whether or not someone tried to control or dominate someone else
Shweder et al, 1997; Graham, Haidt, & Nosek, MFQ, 2007
Ethic of Autonomy violation examples: How much money would you need to
be paid to be convinced to…
Stick a pin into the palm of a child you don't know.
Accept a plasma screen television that a friend of yours wants to give you. You know that your friend bought the TV a year ago from a thief who had stolen it from a wealthy family.
Haidt, 2007
The Big Three: 2. Ethic of Community Issues of Duty, Loyalty, Hierarchy
Should be good member of group as much as possible
Would consider the following to be moral issues: Loyalty to Ingroup:
Whether or not someone did something to betray his or her group
Whether or not someone’s action showed love for his or her country
Hierarchy: Whether or not someone failed to fulfill the duties of his or
her role Whether or not someone showed a lack of respect for
authority Shweder et al, 1997; Graham, Haidt, & Nosek, MFQ, 2007
Ethic of Community violation examples: How much money would you need to
be paid to be convinced to…
Say something slightly bad about your nation (which you don't believe to be true) while calling in, anonymously, to a talk-radio show in a foreign nation.
Slap your father in the face (with his permission) as part of a comedy skit.
Haidt, 2007
Ethic of Community violation examples: How much money would you need to
be paid to be convinced to…
Say something slightly bad about your nation (which you don't believe to be true) while calling in, anonymously, to a talk-radio show in a foreign nation.
Slap your father in the face (with his permission) as part of a comedy skit.
Haidt, 2007
The Big Three: 3. Ethic of Divinity Issues of Sacred Order, Purity, Sanctity
Should not violate the natural, sacred order of things; should not violate the sanctity one’s body
Would consider the following to be moral issues:
Purity: Whether or not someone violated standards of purity and
decency Whether or not someone acted in a way that God would
approve of
Shweder et al, 1997; Graham, Haidt, & Nosek, MFQ, 2007
Ethic of Divinity violation example: How much money would you need to
be paid to be convinced to…
Attend a performance art piece in which the actors act like animals for 30 min, including crawling around naked and urinating on stage.
Haidt, 2007
Kohlberg versus Shweder Kohlberg’s 6 stages:
Moral reasoning: what kinds of reasons do you give?
Preconventional, Conventional, & Postconventional Problems: May not be cross-culturally applicable,
because focuses too narrowly on Ethic of Autonomy Shweder’s Big 3 Ethics:
Moral Concerns: What do you think is a moral concern?
Autonomy (harm & fairness), Community (loyalty & hierarchy), Divinity (purity & sacred order)
What happens when ethics conflict? Joan Miller
PhD University of Chicago Now professor at New School for
Social Research (NYC)
Studies Ethics of Autonomy vs. Ethic of Community in US and in India
A moral conundrum (Miller & Bersoff, 1992)
Your choices:
Why a moral conundrum? Must choose:
Violate your interpersonal obligation? (Community)
Violate rules of not harming an innocent person? (Autonomy)
Asked Indian and American children & adults: what would be your choice?
Results for Adults:
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
100%
Extremely Moderately Minorly
Indian AdultsAmerican Adults
Percentageof adults
who choseto protect
Interpersonal obligation
How undesirable the violations were
Miller & Bersoff, 1992 Moral Conundrum: summary Indian and American adults chose to
resolve the conundrum differently. Forced to choose, the Indian adults chose
to follow Ethics of Community over Ethics of Autonomy more often than American adults did.
Conversely, the American adults chose to violate the interpersonal obligation more often than the Indian adults did.
= Cultural differences in the relative importance of these different Ethics
Are there universal moral concerns? Some moral concerns are not
universally seen as important (e.g. Community and Divinity among liberal Americans)
Given a conflict between these moral concerns, different cultures resolve them differently But there is still debate about whether or
not some or all of these Big 3 Ethics have an innate basis
How about this moral conundrum? There is a secret group of Seattleites
who have the ritual practice of eating parts of their deceased relatives' bodies as part of elaborate funeral rituals.
What do you feel when you read this? Which of the Big 3 Ethics are violated
by the cannibals? Which of the Big 3 Ethics would be
violated if you stopped the practice? Conflict between ethics (Divinity &
Autonomy, but also Community)Based on scenario in Kelly, Stich, Haley, Eng, Fessler 2007
Disgust: a natural moral emotion? Jonathan Haidt
University of Virginia
Is Disgust a good reason to judge something to be immoral?
Disgust = immoral? Asked high and low Socio-Economic Status
(SES) adults in USA and Brazil whether or not a disgusting but harmless action was “OK.”
(A man goes to the grocery store, buys a dead chicken, comes home… masturbates with it… cleans it thoroughly… and eats it. Suffers no harm whatsoever.)
What percentage of respondents say it’s not OK?
Haidt, Koller, & Dias, 1993
Disgust = Immoral?
Not so much for High-SES Americans, but more so for all other groups:
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
100%
Hi-SESUSA
Hi-SESBrazil
Low-SESUSA
Low-SES
Brazil
Percentage saying"NOT OK"
Haidt, Koller, & Dias, 1993
Disgust = Immoral? So, high-SES Americans (college
students) generally think that a disgusting but harmless action is not morally wrong. They don’t think that the feeling of disgust
is a good reason to think something’s wrong.
But… what do they REALLY believe…?
Hypnotized Disgust Hypnotized Disgust (Wheatley & Haidt,
2005) Participants hypnotized:
“When you read the word “often,” you will feel a brief pang of disgust . . . a sickening feeling in your stomach. You will not remember that you have been told this.”
After being brought out of hypnosis, students given several different scenarios to read
Asked to rate how immoral the person was, from 0 to 100
Hypnotized disgust: example Congressman Arnold Paxton frequently gives
speeches condemning corruption and arguing for campaign finance reform. But he is just trying to cover up the fact that he himself [will take bribes from/is often bribed by] the tobacco lobby, and other special interests, to promote their legislation.
(often = feel disgust)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
"Take" "Often"
How immoral ishe? (0 to 100)
Hypnotized disgust What if there was no reason at all to
think the person was immoral?
Hypnotized disgust: no-violation example ‘‘Dan is a student council
representative at his school. This semester he is in charge of scheduling discussions about academic issues. He [tries to take/often picks] topics that appeal to both professors and students in order to stimulate discussion.’’
(often = feel disgust)
0
20
40
60
80
100
"Take" "Often"
How immoral ishe? (0 to 100)
Hypnotized Disgust: Why is Dan immoral?
‘‘It just seems like he’s up to something.’’ “He’s a popularity-seeking snob.’’ ‘‘It just seems so weird and disgusting’’ “I don’t know [why it’s wrong], it just is.”
Disgust = Immoral? Summary For liberal college students, disgust
isn’t a good reason to think something is wrong…
…but it still makes them feel like something’s wrong.
So, do we use emotions or reasoning? Haidt argues that we more often first
have an emotional response, which actually tells us whether or not something is morally wrong.
Then we will try to come up with the reasons for our feelings.
Disgust is a particularly powerful moral emotion; even works on people who don’t think it’s a good reason.
Is disgust biologically wired?
Evolutionary advantages: Incest Cannibalism
Social constructions: Wearing Adolf Hitler’s sweater Burning the American flag
Moral Judgments and culture
Are there universal stages of moral reasoning? Preconventional and Conventional (Kohlberg)
Is there universal agreement on what are the most important moral principles? Community, Autonomy, and Divinity (Shweder)
Do we use our emotions or reasoning to make moral judgments? Emotions, although reasoning is involved