Power affects how people think about moral issues, and has been found to elicit deontological moral judgments. We hypothesized that powerholders' propensity to rely on intuitive thinking would trigger deontological moral choices. In two studies, power was induced by role simulation tasks and participants then made a judgment on a moral dilemma that did not involve bodily harm. In Study 1 memory cognitive load was manipulated to induce an intuitive processing style, and in Study 2 deliberation was induced by asking participants to deliver strong arguments. Results of Study 1 show that high power led to deontological judgments regardless of cognitive load, and cognitive load enhanced deontological preferences among powerless individuals. In S...
Do individuals intuitively favor certain moral actions over others? This study explores the role of...
The relative contribution of reason and intuition to everyday moral decision-making is an issue that...
Moral evaluations occur quickly following heuristic-like intuitive processes without effortful delib...
The current research explores the role of power in moral decision-making. Some work suggests that po...
People in powerful positions often make decisions that have moral implications. Lammers and Stapel (...
The prominent dual process model of moral cognition suggests that reasoners intuitively detect that ...
A growing body of work has examined responses to moral dilemmas where causing some degree of harm le...
Moral judgments play a critical role in motivating and enforcing human cooperation, and research on ...
Is moral judgment intuitive or deliberative? The parallel morality hypothesis suggests that the answ...
Dual-process theories of moral judgment suggest that responses to moral dilemmas are guided by two m...
In our daily lives, we face many opportunities to judge others based on moral principles. These eval...
In this article we will demonstrate how cognitive psychological research on reasoning and decision m...
Moral evaluations occur quickly following heuristic-like intuitive processes without effortful delib...
Do individuals intuitively favor certain moral actions over others? This study explores the role of ...
Do individuals intuitively favor certain moral actions over others? This study explores the role of ...
Do individuals intuitively favor certain moral actions over others? This study explores the role of...
The relative contribution of reason and intuition to everyday moral decision-making is an issue that...
Moral evaluations occur quickly following heuristic-like intuitive processes without effortful delib...
The current research explores the role of power in moral decision-making. Some work suggests that po...
People in powerful positions often make decisions that have moral implications. Lammers and Stapel (...
The prominent dual process model of moral cognition suggests that reasoners intuitively detect that ...
A growing body of work has examined responses to moral dilemmas where causing some degree of harm le...
Moral judgments play a critical role in motivating and enforcing human cooperation, and research on ...
Is moral judgment intuitive or deliberative? The parallel morality hypothesis suggests that the answ...
Dual-process theories of moral judgment suggest that responses to moral dilemmas are guided by two m...
In our daily lives, we face many opportunities to judge others based on moral principles. These eval...
In this article we will demonstrate how cognitive psychological research on reasoning and decision m...
Moral evaluations occur quickly following heuristic-like intuitive processes without effortful delib...
Do individuals intuitively favor certain moral actions over others? This study explores the role of ...
Do individuals intuitively favor certain moral actions over others? This study explores the role of ...
Do individuals intuitively favor certain moral actions over others? This study explores the role of...
The relative contribution of reason and intuition to everyday moral decision-making is an issue that...
Moral evaluations occur quickly following heuristic-like intuitive processes without effortful delib...