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The influence of kill-save ratios and identifiability on moral judgments, Study 1, 2015

Bibliographic Details
Summary:This database pertains to the first study (Study 1 / 2015) of the research programme entitled: The influence of kill-save ratios and identifiability on moral judgments. Below is the abstract of the research programme: In moral dilemmas, decision-making can be based on more utilitarian or deontological reasoning. In a classical trolley dilemma, the indecision lies between choosing to sacrifice one person to save five (utilitarian decision) vs. not sacrificing a human life in any circumstances (deontological decision). In two experimental studies, we manipulated the number of people to be sacrificed (1 to save 5 vs. 3 to save 5) and whether personalizing information about them was presented. Results provide the first evidence of how the effects of kill-save ratios and identifiability of the potential victims are contingent on one another. Specifically, this research shows that when individuating information about the potential victims is present in a trolley dilemma, participants are more reluctant to sacrifice three persons to save five than to sacrifice one person to save five. When such individuating information is nor present, the acceptability of sacrificing the victims does not depend on their number.
Subject:Moral Problems Decision Making
Year:2020
Country:Portugal
Document type:dataset
Access type:Open
Associated institution:Repositório de Dados Científicos
Language:English
Origin:Repositório de Dados Científicos
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conditionsOfAccess_str open access
country_str PT
description This database pertains to the first study (Study 1 / 2015) of the research programme entitled: The influence of kill-save ratios and identifiability on moral judgments. Below is the abstract of the research programme: In moral dilemmas, decision-making can be based on more utilitarian or deontological reasoning. In a classical trolley dilemma, the indecision lies between choosing to sacrifice one person to save five (utilitarian decision) vs. not sacrificing a human life in any circumstances (deontological decision). In two experimental studies, we manipulated the number of people to be sacrificed (1 to save 5 vs. 3 to save 5) and whether personalizing information about them was presented. Results provide the first evidence of how the effects of kill-save ratios and identifiability of the potential victims are contingent on one another. Specifically, this research shows that when individuating information about the potential victims is present in a trolley dilemma, participants are more reluctant to sacrifice three persons to save five than to sacrifice one person to save five. When such individuating information is nor present, the acceptability of sacrificing the victims does not depend on their number.
documentTypeURL_str http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_ddb1
documentType_str dataset
id 248cb381-74c5-4891-acb9-24dc03c5b300
identifierHandle_str http://hdl.handle.net/10400.20/2088
language eng
publicationDateFull_str 2020-12-05T20:12:59Z
publicationDate_str 2020-12-05
publishDate 2020
relatedInstitutions_str_mv Repositório de Dados Científicos
resourceName_str Repositório de Dados Científicos
spellingShingle The influence of kill-save ratios and identifiability on moral judgments, Study 1, 2015
Moral Problems
Decision Making
title The influence of kill-save ratios and identifiability on moral judgments, Study 1, 2015
topic Moral Problems
Decision Making