The prominent dual process model of moral cognition suggests that reasoners intuitively detect that harming others is wrong (deontological System-1 morality) but have to engage in demanding deliberation to realize that harm can be acceptable depending on the consequences (utilitarian System-2 morality). But the nature of the interaction between the processes is not clear. To address this key issue we tested whether deontological reasoners also intuitively grasp the utilitarian dimensions of classic moral dilemmas. In three studies subjects solved moral dilemmas in which utilitarian and deontological considerations cued conflicting or non-conflicting decisions while performing a demanding concurrent load task. Results show that reasoners’ se...
The dual-process theory of moral judgment (Greene, 2008) hypothesizes that moral responses to ethica...
Traditional studies on moral judgement used resolutions of moral dilemmas that were framed in terms ...
One influential framework for examining human moral cognition has been a dual process model, in whic...
Dual-process theories of moral judgment suggest that responses to moral dilemmas are guided by two m...
Sacrificial moral dilemmas elicit a strong conflict between the motive to not personally harm someon...
Cognitive and emotional processes both seem to contribute in the production of moral judgments, but ...
The first principle, often associated with the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant, emphasizes the irr...
Over the course of the last two decades, research on moral judgment has been heavily shaped by the a...
According to an influential dual-process model, a moral judgment is the outcome of a rapid, affect-l...
According to Joshua Greene's influential dual process model of moral judgment, different modes of pr...
Recent work in the cognitive science of morality has been taken to show that moral judgment is large...
Moral decisions are considered as an intuitive process, while conscious reasoning is mostly used onl...
A growing body of work has examined responses to moral dilemmas where causing some degree of harm le...
Abstract: According to Joshua Greene’s influential dual process model of moral judgment, different m...
Power affects how people think about moral issues, and has been found to elicit deontological moral ...
The dual-process theory of moral judgment (Greene, 2008) hypothesizes that moral responses to ethica...
Traditional studies on moral judgement used resolutions of moral dilemmas that were framed in terms ...
One influential framework for examining human moral cognition has been a dual process model, in whic...
Dual-process theories of moral judgment suggest that responses to moral dilemmas are guided by two m...
Sacrificial moral dilemmas elicit a strong conflict between the motive to not personally harm someon...
Cognitive and emotional processes both seem to contribute in the production of moral judgments, but ...
The first principle, often associated with the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant, emphasizes the irr...
Over the course of the last two decades, research on moral judgment has been heavily shaped by the a...
According to an influential dual-process model, a moral judgment is the outcome of a rapid, affect-l...
According to Joshua Greene's influential dual process model of moral judgment, different modes of pr...
Recent work in the cognitive science of morality has been taken to show that moral judgment is large...
Moral decisions are considered as an intuitive process, while conscious reasoning is mostly used onl...
A growing body of work has examined responses to moral dilemmas where causing some degree of harm le...
Abstract: According to Joshua Greene’s influential dual process model of moral judgment, different m...
Power affects how people think about moral issues, and has been found to elicit deontological moral ...
The dual-process theory of moral judgment (Greene, 2008) hypothesizes that moral responses to ethica...
Traditional studies on moral judgement used resolutions of moral dilemmas that were framed in terms ...
One influential framework for examining human moral cognition has been a dual process model, in whic...