| Literature DB >> 27505424 |
Mark Sheskin1, Nicolas Baumard1.
Abstract
Our moral motivations might include a drive towards maximizing overall welfare, consistent with an ethical theory called "utilitarianism." However, people show non-utilitarian judgments in domains as diverse as healthcare decisions, income distributions, and penal laws. Rather than these being deviations from a fundamentally utilitarian psychology, we suggest that our moral judgments are generally non-utilitarian, even for cases that are typically seen as prototypically utilitarian. We show two separate deviations from utilitarianism in such cases: people do not think maximizing welfare is required (they think it is merely acceptable, in some circumstances), and people do not think that equal welfare tradeoffs are even acceptable. We end by discussing how utilitarian reasoning might play a restricted role within a non-utilitarian moral psychology.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27505424 PMCID: PMC4978433 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Summary of Studies 1 to 4.
This bar chart reports the percent of participants agreeing with each of our cases, arranged in order of increasing agreement. Participants do not think it is acceptable to trade 1 life for 1 life, and they do not think it is required to trade 1 life for 5 lives. They are ambivalent about trading 1 painting for 1 painting. They do think it is acceptable to trade 1 life for 5 lives, and they do think it is required to trade 0 lives for 5 lives.