Harmless but disgusting moral violations can be justified as harmful to others due to the negative emotions they elicit. The relationship between the emotions of anger and disgust and the harm associated to these emotions as a result of a moral violation was investigated. Results showed that a disgusting moral violation (taboo violation) described as harmless to others is more related to disgust than to anger. Such violation created a presumption of harm of three different types: to the community, nature, and the individual. Disgust was a mediator between the taboo violation and the presumption of harm to nature, whereas anger was a mediator between the taboo violation and the presumption of harm to the individual. In general, results also ...
The research examines whether anger rather than disgust is more likely to be responsible for changes...
Theories that view emotions as being related in some way to moral judgments suggest that condemning ...
Previous studies support a link between moral disgust and impurity, while anger is linked to harm. W...
Harmless but disgusting moral violations can be justified as harmful to others due to the negative e...
Three experiments investigated the relationship between the presumption of harm in harmfree violatio...
With the recent upswing in research interest on the moral implications of disgust, there has been un...
With the recent upswing in research interest on the moral implications of disgust, there has been un...
Moral violations often evoke disgust. While it has been consistently shown that disgust is a predomi...
People often report disgust toward moral violations. Some perspectives posit that this disgust is in...
People often report disgust toward moral violations. Some perspectives posit that this disgust is in...
We propose that, when people judge moral situations, anger responds to the contextual cues of harm a...
The purpose of this thesis was to compare the cognitive processes that accompany moral anger and dis...
In the present research, we tested the unreasoning disgust hypothesis: moral disgust, in particular ...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgements of wrongdoing. W...
Recent work suggests that negative moral judgements of sexual activities are informed by disgust and...
The research examines whether anger rather than disgust is more likely to be responsible for changes...
Theories that view emotions as being related in some way to moral judgments suggest that condemning ...
Previous studies support a link between moral disgust and impurity, while anger is linked to harm. W...
Harmless but disgusting moral violations can be justified as harmful to others due to the negative e...
Three experiments investigated the relationship between the presumption of harm in harmfree violatio...
With the recent upswing in research interest on the moral implications of disgust, there has been un...
With the recent upswing in research interest on the moral implications of disgust, there has been un...
Moral violations often evoke disgust. While it has been consistently shown that disgust is a predomi...
People often report disgust toward moral violations. Some perspectives posit that this disgust is in...
People often report disgust toward moral violations. Some perspectives posit that this disgust is in...
We propose that, when people judge moral situations, anger responds to the contextual cues of harm a...
The purpose of this thesis was to compare the cognitive processes that accompany moral anger and dis...
In the present research, we tested the unreasoning disgust hypothesis: moral disgust, in particular ...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgements of wrongdoing. W...
Recent work suggests that negative moral judgements of sexual activities are informed by disgust and...
The research examines whether anger rather than disgust is more likely to be responsible for changes...
Theories that view emotions as being related in some way to moral judgments suggest that condemning ...
Previous studies support a link between moral disgust and impurity, while anger is linked to harm. W...