| Literature DB >> 31866898 |
Niklas Dworazik1, Joscha Kärtner1, Leon Lange2, Moritz Köster3.
Abstract
There is a large scientific interest in human moral judgments. However, little is known about the developmental origins and the specific role of the primary caregivers in the early development of inter-individual differences in human morality. Here, we assess the moral intuitions of 3- to 6-year-old children and their mothers (N = 56), using child-friendly versions of five trolley dilemmas and two control scenarios. We found that children responded to moral dilemmas similar to their mothers, revealed by correlations between the responses of mothers and their children in all five moral dilemmas and a highly similar overall response pattern between mother and child across all judgments. This was revealed by a high agreement in the response pattern of children and their mothers. Furthermore, children's overall response tendencies were similar to the response tendencies of adults. Thus, similar moral principles (e.g., the Doctrine of the Double Effect) which have been identified in adults, and describes as a universal moral grammar, may guide the moral intuitions in early childhood already. Taken together, the present findings provide the first evidence that children's moral intuitions are closely associated with the moral intuitions of their mother.Entities:
Keywords: moral cognition; moral development; parental influence; trolley dilemma; universal moral grammar theory
Year: 2019 PMID: 31866898 PMCID: PMC6909973 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Overview of the trolley dilemma responses. (A) The five moral dilemmas shown to mother and child. (B) Responses of mothers and children. Bars indicate the percentage of responses that advocate intervention (yes in percent). Whiskers indicate SE. Asterisks indicate the results of McNemar’s tests. (C) Correspondence between maternal and children’s advocation for intervention (yes) and for omission (no). Agreements (green) and disagreements (red) between mother–child dyads, with the corresponding correlation coefficient. ∗p < 0.05, ∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗∗p < 0.001.
Dilemma rationale.
| Bystander | The ball is threatening a group of five children. The agent can redirect the ball onto a side track and thereby save the group from the collision but will hurt one single child. |
| Footbridge | In contrast to the Bystander case, the only chance to save the five children is to shove a child with a big backpack from the bridge. Thereby that child clashes with the ball and stops it but gets hurt at the same time. |
| Drop Man | In contrast to the Footbridge scenario, the only way to save the five children is to activate a trapdoor by remote through which the child with the backpack falls onto the tracks. |
| Implied Consent | In this scenario, a single child is threatened by the ball. The agent can shove the child out of the ball’s way and thereby save the child from getting hurt badly, but the child will still get hurt slightly. |
| Expensive Equipment | In this scenario, the ball is about to crash into a pile of toys. The only way to save the toys is to redirect the ball onto a side track, where a single child would get hurt by the collision with the ball. |
| Costless Rescue | This control condition is similar to the Bystander case. However, no child is standing on the side track, wherefore redirecting the ball does not result in any harm. |
| Disproportional Death | In this control condition, the ball is threatening a single child. Redirecting the ball onto the side track would result in harming five children. |
FIGURE 2Overview of the control scenarios. (A) The two non-moral control scenarios shown to mother and child. (B) Responses of mothers and children. Bars represent the percentage of responses that advocate intervention (yes in percent). Whiskers indicate SE. Asterisks indicate the results of McNemar’s tests. (C) Correspondence between maternal and children’s advocation for intervention (yes) and for omission (no). Agreements (green) and disagreements (red) of the mother–child dyads with the corresponding correlation coefficient. ∗∗p < 0.01, ∗∗∗p < 0.001.