| Literature DB >> 31249653 |
Damien L Crone1, Neil L Levy2,3.
Abstract
Free will is widely considered a foundational component of Western moral and legal codes, and yet current conceptions of free will are widely thought to fit uncomfortably with much research in psychology and neuroscience. Recent research investigating the consequences of laypeople's free will beliefs (FWBs) for everyday moral behavior suggests that stronger FWBs are associated with various desirable moral characteristics (e.g., greater helpfulness, less dishonesty). These findings have sparked concern regarding the potential for moral degeneration throughout society as science promotes a view of human behavior that is widely perceived to undermine the notion of free will. We report four studies (combined N = 921) originally concerned with possible mediators and/or moderators of the abovementioned associations. Unexpectedly, we found no association between FWBs and moral behavior. Our findings suggest that the FWB-moral behavior association (and accompanying concerns regarding decreases in FWBs causing moral degeneration) may be overstated.Entities:
Keywords: agency; altruism; ethics/morality; helping/prosocial behavior; individual differences; morality; personality
Year: 2018 PMID: 31249653 PMCID: PMC6542011 DOI: 10.1177/1948550618780732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Psychol Personal Sci ISSN: 1948-5506
Summary of Demographic Information.
| Study | Final | % Female |
|
| % Christian | % FW |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 | 210 | 46.19 | 35.63 | 12.72 | 40.48 | — |
| Study 2 | 220 | 59.55 | 39.56 | 13.23 | 50.91 | 34.55 |
| Study 3 | 294 | 51.70 | 37.89 | 12.24 | 48.64 | 35.37 |
| Study 4 | 197 | 46.19 | 34.07 | 11.68 | 45.69 | 32.49 |
Note. % FW refers to percentage of participants who reported having previously participated in research on free will beliefs.
Summary of Exclusions.
| Study | Original | Incomplete | Inattentive | Final |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 | 250 | 29 | 11 | 210 |
| Study 2 | 243 | 22 | 1 | 220 |
| Study 3 | 329 | 32 | 3 | 294 |
| Study 4 | 288 | 89 | 2 | 197 |
Summary of Key Measures.
| Prosocial Behavior | Antisocial Behavior | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | FWB (α) | Measure | Payoffs | Measure | Payoffs |
| 1 | FAD (.88), FWI (.88) | Dictator game | Self: US$0–US$0.10 Other: US$0–US$0.10 Max total: US$0.10 | — | — |
| 2 | FAD (.86), FWI (.89) | SVO slider | Self: US$0.41–US$0.56 Other: US$0.23–US$0.52 Max total: US$0.90 | Dice | US$0.01–US$0.06 |
| 3 | FAD (.87), FWI (.85) | SVO slider | Self: US$51.75–US$72.75 Other: US$43–US$71 Max total: US$128.50 | Dice | US$5–US$30 |
| 4 | FAD (.90)a | SVO slider | Self: US$20.25–US$27.75 Other: US$11.50–US$26 Max total: US$45 | Dice | US$5–US$30 |
Note. FWB = free will belief; FAD = FAD-Plus (Paulhus & Carey, 2011); FWI = Free Will Inventory (Nadelhoffer, Shepard, Nahmias, Sripada, & Ross, 2014); SVO Slider = social value orientation slider measure (Murphy, Ackermann, & Handgraaf, 2011).
a Free Will subscale only.
Figure 1.Bivariate distributions of free will beliefs (FWIs) and related belief measures (FAD-Plus subscales in Rows 1–4; FWI subscales in Rows 5–7) and measures of prosocial behavior (donation and social value orientation angle), antisocial behavior (dice), and moral identity and social desirability (columns). Point color represents study number (black = Study 1, red = Study 2, green = Study 3, and blue = Study 4). Where multiple studies are summarized in a single panel, correlation coefficients refer to combined data sets.
Figure 2.Correlation between free will beliefs and moral identity and prosocial behavior (left panel) and cheating behavior (right panel) across studies. DG = dictator game; SVO = social value orientation slider measure; Lot. = lottery; FWI = Free Will Inventory; FAD = FAD-Plus; moral identity refers to the Internalization subscale only; *p < .05. **p < .01. ***p < .001.
Summary of Meta-Analytic Effect Sizes and Heterogeneity Estimates.
| Predictor | Generosity | Cheating | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| FAD-Plus | ||||||
| Free will | −.06 [−.12, .01] | .088 | 0.00 [0.00, 2.33] | −.03 [−.11, .04] | .392 | 0.00 [0.00, 95.68] |
| Scientific determinism | −.05 [−.13, .02] | .164 | 0.00 [0.00, 95.81] | .02 [−.11, .14] | .806 | 53.41 [0.00, 99.95] |
| Fatalistic determinism | −.04 [−.11, .03] | .345 | 0.00 [0.00, 95.78] | .02 [−.11, .06] | .593 | 0.00 [0.00, 97.86] |
| Unpredictability | .03 [−.05, .10] | .490 | 0.00a | .02 [−.06, .12] | .597 | 7.63 [0.00, 99.91] |
| Free Will Inventory | ||||||
| Free will | −.05 [−.12, .02] | .210 | 0.00 [0.00, 90.39] | −.05 [−.18, .07] | .421 | 50.26 [0.00, 99.95] |
| Determinism | −.06 [−.14, .001] | .077 | 0.00 [0.00, 97.09] | .01 [−.16, .17] | .937 | 70.45 [0.00, 99.97] |
| Dualism | .03 [−.04, .10] | .447 | 0.00 [0.00, 11.27] | −.13 [−.21, −.04] |
| 0.00 [0.00, 99.80] |
| Moral identity | ||||||
| Internalization | .17 [.11, .24] |
| 8.45 [0.00, 92.15] | −.16 [−.23, −.08] |
| 0.00a |
| Symbolization | .09 [.02, .15] |
| 0.00 [0.00, 91.45] | −.07 [−.14, .01] | .077 | 0.00 [0.00, 96.82] |
Note. Significant correlations (p < .05) in boldface. CI = confidence interval.
a Heterogeneity estimate was negative; therefore, confidence intervals could not be computed.