Abstract. Schnall, Benton, and Harvey (2008) hypothesized that physical cleanliness reduces the severity of moral judgments. In support of this idea, they found that individuals make less severe judgments when they are primed with the concept of cleanliness (Exp. 1) and when they wash their hands after experiencing disgust (Exp. 2). We conducted direct replications of both studies using materials supplied by the original authors. We did not find evidence that physical cleanliness reduced the severity of moral judgments using samples sizes that provided over.99 power to detect the original effect sizes. Our estimates of the overall effect size were much smaller than estimates from Experiment 1 (origina
© 2016, © The Author(s) 2016. There is evidence that inducing feelings of disgust increases the se...
We studied the role of social dynamics in moral decision-making and behavior by investigating how ph...
Abstract. Johnson, Cheung, and Donnellan (2014a) reported a failure to replicate Schnall, Benton, an...
Theories of moral judgment have long emphasized reasoning and conscious thought while downplaying th...
Previous studies showed that physical cleansing affects moral judgments and that even the activation...
The study examines factors that influence moral judgment. Past research has indicated that the level...
doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01276 Does cleanliness influence moral judgments? Response effort moderates ...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Moral threats, including threats to moral self-worth, have been associate...
Physical cleansing has been a focal element in religious ceremonies for thousands of years. The prev...
Previous studies showed that washing one’s hand not only removes dirt from the body, it also weakens...
Water and soap remove more than physical dirt―they attenuate guilt from one’s moral transgressions (...
Ever since the embodiment of moral cleanliness was first empirically tested and documented by Zhong ...
Although disgust has been implicated in moral judgments, the extent to which the influence of disgus...
Many superstitious practices entail the belief that good or bad luck can be “washed away. ” Consiste...
Handwashing removes more than dirt—italso removes the guilt of past misdeeds,weakens the urge to eng...
© 2016, © The Author(s) 2016. There is evidence that inducing feelings of disgust increases the se...
We studied the role of social dynamics in moral decision-making and behavior by investigating how ph...
Abstract. Johnson, Cheung, and Donnellan (2014a) reported a failure to replicate Schnall, Benton, an...
Theories of moral judgment have long emphasized reasoning and conscious thought while downplaying th...
Previous studies showed that physical cleansing affects moral judgments and that even the activation...
The study examines factors that influence moral judgment. Past research has indicated that the level...
doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01276 Does cleanliness influence moral judgments? Response effort moderates ...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Moral threats, including threats to moral self-worth, have been associate...
Physical cleansing has been a focal element in religious ceremonies for thousands of years. The prev...
Previous studies showed that washing one’s hand not only removes dirt from the body, it also weakens...
Water and soap remove more than physical dirt―they attenuate guilt from one’s moral transgressions (...
Ever since the embodiment of moral cleanliness was first empirically tested and documented by Zhong ...
Although disgust has been implicated in moral judgments, the extent to which the influence of disgus...
Many superstitious practices entail the belief that good or bad luck can be “washed away. ” Consiste...
Handwashing removes more than dirt—italso removes the guilt of past misdeeds,weakens the urge to eng...
© 2016, © The Author(s) 2016. There is evidence that inducing feelings of disgust increases the se...
We studied the role of social dynamics in moral decision-making and behavior by investigating how ph...
Abstract. Johnson, Cheung, and Donnellan (2014a) reported a failure to replicate Schnall, Benton, an...