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Making mountains of morality from molehills of virtue: Threat causes people to overestimate their moral credentials

Journal

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

Subject

Organisational Behaviour

Authors / Editors

Effron D A

Biographies

Publication Year

2014

Abstract

Seven studies demonstrate that threats to moral identity can increase how definitively people think they have previously proven their morality. When White participants were made to worry that their future behavior could seem racist, they overestimated how much a prior decision of theirs would convince an observer of their non-prejudiced character (Studies 1a-3). Ironically, such overestimation made participants appear more prejudiced to observers (Study 4). Studies 5 to 6 demonstrated a similar effect of threat in the domain of charitable giving—an effect driven by individuals for whom maintaining a moral identity is particularly important. Threatened participants only enhanced their beliefs that they had proven their morality when there was at least some supporting evidence, but these beliefs were insensitive to whether the evidence was weak or strong (Study 2). Discussion considers the role of motivated reasoning, and implications for ethical decision making and moral licensing.

Keywords

Moral credentials; Meta-perceptions; Moral licensing; Racial prejudice; Charitable giving; Self; Moral standards; Attribution; Ethics; Motivated reasoning; Threat; Moral identity

Available on ECCH

No


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