Abstract

The two studies reported here demonstrated that a combination of anger and disgust predicts moral outrage. In Study 1, anger toward moral transgressions (sexual assault, funeral picketing) predicted moral outrage only when it co-occurred with at least moderate disgust, and disgust predicted moral outrage only when it co-occurred with at least moderate anger. In Study 2, a mock-jury paradigm that included emotionally disturbing photographs of a murder victim revealed that, compared to anger, disgust was a more consistent predictor of moral outrage (i.e., it predicted moral outrage at all levels of anger). Furthermore, moral outrage mediated the effect of participants’ anger on their confidence in a guilty verdict—but only when anger co-occurred with at least a moderate level of disgust—whereas moral outrage mediated the effect of participants’ disgust on their verdict confidence at all levels of anger. The interactive effect of anger and disgust has important implications for theoretical explanations of moral outrage, moral judgments in general, and legal decision making.

Highlights

  • Two studies demonstrated that moral outrage is predicted not just from anger, but from a combination of anger and disgust

  • The Interactive Effect of Anger and Disgust in Moral Outrage and Judgments People react to moral transgressions with moral outrage—a constellation of cognitive, affective, and behavioral reactions (Skitka, Bauman, & Mullen, 2004; Tetlock, Kristel, Elson, Green, & Lerner, 2000), which influences a variety of important outcomes: retribution and compensation (Carlsmith, Darley, & Robinson, 2002; Tetlock et al, 2000), political intolerance (Skitka et al, 2004), voting (Okimoto & Brescoll, 2010), and legal decisions (Salerno et al, 2010)

  • Despite the frequent co-occurrence of anger and disgust, and the efforts to investigate their independent effects on moral judgments, we are unaware of any studies testing the unique effect of disgust on moral outrage, nor the disgust-anger interactive effect on moral outrage

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Summary

Introduction

Two studies demonstrated that moral outrage is predicted not just from anger, but from a combination of anger and disgust. The primary goal of these studies was to investigate whether moral outrage arises from a combination of disgust and anger by testing the interactive effect of anger and disgust on moral outrage and subsequent judgments.

Results
Conclusion
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