People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally affected by the wrongdoing and even if their sanctioning yields no immediate benefits—a behavior known as third-party punishment. A notable body of literature suggests that this behavior is primarily driven by retribution (i.e., evening out the harm caused), rather than by the utilitarian motives of special prevention (i.e., preventing recidivism), or general prevention (i.e., preventing imitation). This has led to the conclusion that laypeople are “retributivists” in general. More recent evidence, however, raises doubts about the ubiquity of retributivism, showing that punishment is driven by multiple motives. The present research adds to thi...
When do children, adolescents, and adults decide to punish fairness violations? Two studies with 9-y...
Punishment represents a key mechanism to deter norm violations and is motivated by retribution and/o...
There are two broad functional explanations for second-party punishment: fitness-leveling and deterr...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
The human tendency to impose costs on those who have behaved antisocially towards third parties (thi...
Theories of morality maintain that punishment supports the emergence and maintenance of moral behavi...
Theories of morality maintain that punishment supports the emergence and maintenance of moral behavi...
SummaryAn important, and perhaps uniquely human, mechanism for maintaining cooperation against free ...
Human cooperation is likely supported by our tendency to punish selfishness in others. Social norms ...
Humans will incur costs to punish others who violate social norms. Theories of justice highlight 2 m...
An important, and perhaps uniquely human, mechanism for maintaining cooperation against free riders ...
Punishment can lose its legitimacy if the enforcer can profit from delivering punishment. We use a c...
When do children, adolescents, and adults decide to punish fairness violations? Two studies with 9-y...
Punishment represents a key mechanism to deter norm violations and is motivated by retribution and/o...
There are two broad functional explanations for second-party punishment: fitness-leveling and deterr...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
People willingly accept personal costs to sanction norm violations even if they are not personally a...
The human tendency to impose costs on those who have behaved antisocially towards third parties (thi...
Theories of morality maintain that punishment supports the emergence and maintenance of moral behavi...
Theories of morality maintain that punishment supports the emergence and maintenance of moral behavi...
SummaryAn important, and perhaps uniquely human, mechanism for maintaining cooperation against free ...
Human cooperation is likely supported by our tendency to punish selfishness in others. Social norms ...
Humans will incur costs to punish others who violate social norms. Theories of justice highlight 2 m...
An important, and perhaps uniquely human, mechanism for maintaining cooperation against free riders ...
Punishment can lose its legitimacy if the enforcer can profit from delivering punishment. We use a c...
When do children, adolescents, and adults decide to punish fairness violations? Two studies with 9-y...
Punishment represents a key mechanism to deter norm violations and is motivated by retribution and/o...
There are two broad functional explanations for second-party punishment: fitness-leveling and deterr...