Meta-ethics and the mortality: Mortality salience leads people to adopt a less subjectivist morality

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Elsevier

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info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess

Özet

Although lay notions in normative ethics have previously been investigated within the framework of the dual-process interpretation of the terror management theory (TMT), meta-ethical beliefs (subjective vs. objective morality) have not been previously investigated within the same framework. In the present research, we primed mortality salience, shown to impair reasoning performance in previous studies, to see whether it inhibits subjectivist moral judgments in three separate experiments. In Experiment 3, we also investigated whether impaired reasoning performance indeed mediates the effect of mortality salience on subjectivism. The results of the three experiments consistently showed that people in the mortality salience group reported significantly less subjectivist responses than the control group, and impaired reasoning performance partially mediates it. Overall, the results are consistent with the dual-process interpretation of TMT and suggest that not only normative but also meta-ethical judgments can be explained by this model.

Açıklama

Yılmaz, Onurcan (Dogus Author) -- Bahçekapılı, Hasan Galip (Dogus Author)

Anahtar Kelimeler

Subjectivism, Objectivism, Meta-Ethical Beliefs, Mortality Salience, Impaired Reasoning Performance, Analytic Cognitive Style

Kaynak

Cognition

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Cilt

179

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Künye

Yılmaz, O., Bahçekapılı, H. G. (2018). Meta-ethics and the mortality: Mortality salience leads people to adopt a less subjectivist morality. Cognition, 179, 171-177. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2018.06.014

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