“It’s wrong but I can’t explain why!” Moral dumbfounding and moral judgement: how failure to justify moral judgements can inform our understanding of how they are made
Abstract
Moral dumbfounding occurs when people fail to justify a strongly held moral
judgement with supporting reasons. The discovery of moral dumbfounding coincided
with a growth in intuitionist and dual-process theories of moral judgement over
rationalist theories, and its existence has directly informed their development (e.g.,
Haidt, 2001; Prinz, 2005; Bucciarelli, Khemlani, & Johnson-Laird 2008; Dwyer, 2009;
Cushman, Young, & Greene 2010). Despite the influence of moral dumbfounding on
the morality literature, the phenomenon is poorly understood. Direct evidence in
support of dumbfounding is limited to a single study (Haidt, Björklund, & Murphy,
2000), which had a final sample of 30 participants and was never published in peerreviewed
form. The aim of the current project is to examine the phenomenon of moral
dumbfounding directly, firstly, to test if it is a real phenomenon, and secondly to
evaluate how the existence (or absence) of moral dumbfounding can inform theories of
moral judgement. Three studies demonstrate that dumbfounding is a genuine
phenomenon that can be reliably elicited in a laboratory setting, and develop methods
for studying dumbfounding. Two studies address specific challenges to dumbfounding,
and demonstrate that (a) people do not reliably articulate reasons that may be governing
their judgement, and (b) moral principles are not consistently applied across differing
contexts. A final set of studies tested two hypothesised explanations of moral
dumbfounding associated with dual-process theory (e.g., Cushman, 2013; Crockett,
2013), and model theory (Bucciarelli et al., 2008). Using a range of manipulations
across seven studies, the observed evidence for these explanations is weak. That
dumbfounding is poorly explained by existing theories of moral judgement presents a
significant limitation of current theories of moral judgement. To address this limitation,
a possible alternative theoretical approach that provides an explanation for moral
dumbfounding is explored.
Keywords
MoralityJudgement
Intuition
Reasoning
Moral dumbfounding
Language (ISO 639-3)
engCollections
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