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How Power Affects Moral Judgments: The Presence of Harm to Life Modifies the Association between Power and Moral Choices

Mufan Zheng, Ana Guinote () and Wei Luo
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Mufan Zheng: Department of Psychology, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, China
Ana Guinote: Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, London WC1H 0AP, UK
Wei Luo: Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, London WC1H 0AP, UK

Social Sciences, 2024, vol. 13, issue 5, 1-20

Abstract: Lammers and Stapel reported that high power increases deontological (rule-based) moral thinking, and low power increases utilitarian (outcome-based) moral thinking. However, the dilemmas were mild and did not involve harm to life. Here, we examined whether the presence or absence of harm to life affects the moral decisions of powerholders. To help establish the replicability and validity of the effects of power on moral judgments in the absence of harm to life, we first performed an exact replication of a study conducted by Lammers and Stapel, and this experiment was followed up by a similar study in an organizational context in China (Studies 1 and 2). Studies 3 and 4 investigated whether power and the presence/absence of harm to life interacted with preferences for deontological versus utilitarian moral judgments. Power consistently triggered deontological thinking. However, power differences in moral reasoning only emerged when there was no harm to life. Harm prompted deontological responses among control and powerless individuals, which nullified differences across the power conditions. The findings demarcate the generalizability of the association between power and a moral thinking style.

Keywords: power; moral judgment; deontology; utilitarianism; harm (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: A B N P Y80 Z00 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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