Humans will incur costs to punish others who violate social norms. Theories of justice highlight 2 motives for punishment: a forward-looking deterrence of future norm violations and a backward-looking retributive desire to harm. Previous studies of costly punishment have not isolated how much people are willing to pay for retribution alone, because typically punishment both inflicts damage (satisfying the retributive motive) and communicates a norm violation (satisfying the deterrence motive). Here, we isolated retributive motives by examining how much people will invest in punishment when the punished individual will never learn about the punishment. Such "hidden" punishment cannot deter future norm violations but was nevertheless frequent...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...
Punishment represents a key mechanism to deter norm violations and is motivated by retribution and/o...
Punishment represents a key mechanism to deter norm violations and is motivated by retribution and/o...
Prior research demonstrates a willingness to incur costs to punish norm violators. But, how strong a...
One popular justification for punishment is the just deserts rationale: A person deserves punishment...
There are two broad functional explanations for second-party punishment: fitness-leveling and deterr...
One popular justification for punishment is the just deserts rationale: A person deserves punishment...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people s pu...
When people decide to punish others, their choice is driven almost entirely by retribution. However,...
We conduct an experiment to examine the role of retribution and deterrence in motivating third party...
We conduct an experiment to examine the role of retribution and deterrence in motivating third party...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
One popular justification for punishment is the just deserts rationale: A person deserves punishment...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...
Punishment represents a key mechanism to deter norm violations and is motivated by retribution and/o...
Punishment represents a key mechanism to deter norm violations and is motivated by retribution and/o...
Prior research demonstrates a willingness to incur costs to punish norm violators. But, how strong a...
One popular justification for punishment is the just deserts rationale: A person deserves punishment...
There are two broad functional explanations for second-party punishment: fitness-leveling and deterr...
One popular justification for punishment is the just deserts rationale: A person deserves punishment...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people s pu...
When people decide to punish others, their choice is driven almost entirely by retribution. However,...
We conduct an experiment to examine the role of retribution and deterrence in motivating third party...
We conduct an experiment to examine the role of retribution and deterrence in motivating third party...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
One popular justification for punishment is the just deserts rationale: A person deserves punishment...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people’s pu...