Research suggests that moral evaluations change during adulthood. Older adults (75+) tend to judge accidentally harmful acts more severely than younger adults do, and this age-related difference is in part due to the greater negligence older adults attribute to the accidental harmdoers. Across two studies (N=254), we find support for this claim and report the novel discovery that older adults’ increased attribution of negligence, in turn, is associated with a higher perceived likelihood that the accident would occur. We propose that, because older adults perceive accidents as more likely than younger adults do, they condemn the agents and their actions more and even infer that the agents’ omission to exercise due care was intentional. These findings refine our understanding of the cognitive processes underpinning moral judgment in older adulthood and highlight the role of subjective probability judgments in negligence attribution.
Age-Related Differences in Moral Judgment: The Role of Probability Judgments / Margoni, Francesco; Geipel, Janet; Hadjichristidis, Constantinos; Bakiaj, Richard; Surian, Luca. - In: COGNITIVE SCIENCE. - ISSN 1551-6709. - ELETTRONICO. - 47:9(2023), p. e13345. [10.1111/cogs.13345]
Age-Related Differences in Moral Judgment: The Role of Probability Judgments
Margoni, Francesco
Primo
;Geipel, JanetSecondo
;Hadjichristidis, Constantinos;Bakiaj, RichardPenultimo
;Surian, LucaUltimo
2023-01-01
Abstract
Research suggests that moral evaluations change during adulthood. Older adults (75+) tend to judge accidentally harmful acts more severely than younger adults do, and this age-related difference is in part due to the greater negligence older adults attribute to the accidental harmdoers. Across two studies (N=254), we find support for this claim and report the novel discovery that older adults’ increased attribution of negligence, in turn, is associated with a higher perceived likelihood that the accident would occur. We propose that, because older adults perceive accidents as more likely than younger adults do, they condemn the agents and their actions more and even infer that the agents’ omission to exercise due care was intentional. These findings refine our understanding of the cognitive processes underpinning moral judgment in older adulthood and highlight the role of subjective probability judgments in negligence attribution.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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