Individual Differences in Moral Disgust Do Not Predict Utilitarian Judgments, Sexual and Pathogen Disgust Do

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Laakasuo , M , Sundvall , J & Drosinou , M-A 2017 , ' Individual Differences in Moral Disgust Do Not Predict Utilitarian Judgments, Sexual and Pathogen Disgust Do ' , Scientific Reports , vol. 7 , 45526 . https://doi.org/10.1038/srep45526

Title: Individual Differences in Moral Disgust Do Not Predict Utilitarian Judgments, Sexual and Pathogen Disgust Do
Author: Laakasuo, Michael; Sundvall, Jukka; Drosinou, Maria-Anna
Contributor organization: Department of Modern Languages 2010-2017
Medicum
Date: 2017-03-31
Language: eng
Number of pages: 10
Belongs to series: Scientific Reports
ISSN: 2045-2322
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep45526
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/234090
Abstract: The role of emotional disgust and disgust sensitivity in moral judgment and decision-making has been debated intensively for over 20 years. Until very recently, there were two main evolutionary narratives for this rather puzzling association. One of the models suggest that it was developed through some form of group selection mechanism, where the internal norms of the groups were acting as pathogen safety mechanisms. Another model suggested that these mechanisms were developed through hygiene norms, which were piggybacking on pathogen disgust mechanisms. In this study we present another alternative, namely that this mechanism might have evolved through sexual disgust sensitivity. We note that though the role of disgust in moral judgment has been questioned recently, few studies have taken disgust sensitivity to account. We present data from a large sample (N=1300) where we analyzed the associations between The Three Domain Disgust Scale and the most commonly used 12 moral dilemmas measuring utilitarian/deontological preferences with Structural Equation Modeling. Our results indicate that of the three domains of disgust, only sexual disgust is associated with more deontological moral preferences. We also found that pathogen disgust was associated with more utilitarian preferences. Implications of the findings are discussed.
Subject: SENSITIVITY
DILEMMAS
DOMAINS
PERSONALITY
PSYCHOLOGY
CRITERIA
ALPHA
515 Psychology
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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