Moral trade‐offs reveal foundational representations that predict unique variance in political attitudes

Author:

Ahluwalia‐McMeddes Amrita1ORCID,Moore Adam2ORCID,Marr Calum3ORCID,Kunders Zara2

Affiliation:

1. Division of Psychology University of Dundee Dundee UK

2. Department of Psychology University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

3. Centre for Public Health Queen's University Belfast Belfast UK

Abstract

AbstractMoral Foundations Theory (MFT) explains variation in moral judgements on the basis of multiple innate, intuitive foundations and has been subject to criticism over recent years. Prior research has tended to rely on explicit self‐report in the Moral Foundations Questionnaire (MFQ). In contrast, we seek to capture intuitive choices between foundations in a novel task – the Moral Foundations Conflict Task (MFCT). Across four studies, responses on this task reflect foundations measured by the MFQ (study 1), are not altered under cognitive load or reduced cognitive control (studies 2a and 2b); and explain unique variance in political orientation and related constructs (study 3). Furthermore, using responses and response times generated on the MFCT, we present a computationally explicit model of foundation‐related intuitive judgements and show that these patterns are consistent with the theoretical claims of MFT. These findings show that the MFCT outperforms the MFQ and can contribute to the understanding of moral value conflicts, furthering debate on the nature of moral values.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference160 articles.

1. Ahluwalia A.(2020).The Moral Foundations Conflict Task: Measuring intuitive conflict between moral foundations using a novel task(PhD). University of Edinburgh Edinburgh.https://doi.org/10.7488/era/1306

2. Will you get vaccinated? Trade‐offs between purity, liberty and care predict attitudes towards Covid‐19 vaccination

3. Does an Abstract Mind-Set Increase the Internal Consistency of Moral Attitudes and Strengthen Individualizing Foundations?

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