Abstract

Hypothetical trolley problems are widely used to elicit moral intuitions, which are employed in the development of moral theory and the psychological study of moral judgments. The scenarios used are outlandish, and some philosophers and psychologists have questioned whether the judgments made in such unrealistic and unfamiliar scenarios are a reliable basis for theory-building. We present two experiments that investigate whether differences in moral judgment due to the role of the agent, previously found in a standard trolley scenario, persist when the structure of the problem is transplanted to a more familiar context. Our first experiment compares judgments in hypothetical scenarios; our second experiment operationalizes some of those scenarios in the laboratory, allowing us to observe judgments about decisions that are really being made. In the hypothetical experiment, we found that the role effect reversed in our more familiar context, both in judgments about what the actor ought to do and in judgments about the moral rightness of the action. However, in our laboratory experiment, the effects reversed back or disappeared. Among judgments of what the actor ought to do, we found the same role effect as in the standard hypothetical trolley scenario, but the effect of role on moral judgments disappeared.

Highlights

  • Psychologists and philosophers use hypothetical dilemmas to elicit moral judgments (e.g., Kamm, 1996; Greene et al, 2001; Rozyman and Baron, 2002; Cushman et al, 2006; Schaich Borg et al, 2006; Waldmann and Dieterich, 2007; Nadelhoffer and Feltz, 2008)

  • We found a difference in moral judgment associated with the role of the actor in the scenario, who was the target of the judgment, but the direction of this difference changed depending on the context

  • In the game show contexts, it was judged more right for audience members, who were onlookers, than players, who were participating in the quiz, to press the button

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Summary

Introduction

Psychologists and philosophers use hypothetical dilemmas to elicit moral judgments (e.g., Kamm, 1996; Greene et al, 2001; Rozyman and Baron, 2002; Cushman et al, 2006; Schaich Borg et al, 2006; Waldmann and Dieterich, 2007; Nadelhoffer and Feltz, 2008). Trolley problems are a family of moral dilemmas devised by philosophers in order in order to investigate why it is permissible to cause a harm to one in order to save many in some circumstances but not in others (Foot, 1967; Thomson, 1976, 1985). Other trolley problems, which are often contrasted to Side-track, vary the details about how the five are saved and the one killed

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