Sun,
Jessie, Joshua A. Wilt, Peter Meindl, Hanne M. Watkins, and Geoffrey
Goodwin. 2022. “How and Why People Want to Be More Moral.” PsyArXiv.
October 13. doi:10.31234/osf.io/6smzh
Abstract: What types of
moral improvements do people wish to make? Do they hope to become more
good, or less bad? Do they wish to be more caring? More honest? More
loyal? And why exactly do they want to become more moral? Presumably,
most people want to improve their morality because this would benefit
others, but is this in fact their primary motivation? Here, we begin to
investigate these questions. Across two large, preregistered studies (N =
1,818), participants provided open-ended descriptions of one change
they could make in order to become more moral; they then reported their
beliefs about and motives for this change. In both studies, people most
frequently expressed desires to improve their compassion and more often
framed their moral improvement goals in terms of amplifying good
behaviors than curbing bad ones. The strongest predictor of moral
motivation was the extent to which people believed that making the
change would have positive consequences for their own well-being.
Together, these studies provide rich descriptive insights into how
ordinary people want to be more moral, and show that they are
particularly motivated to do so for their own sake.
Bipartisan Alliance, a Society for the Study of the US Constitution, and of Human Nature, where Republicans and Democrats meet.
No comments:
Post a Comment