Moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishment

Third-party punishment has recently received attention as an explanation for human altruism. Feelings of anger in response to norm violations are assumed to motivate third-party sanctions, yet there is only sparse and indirect support for this idea. We investigated the impact of both anger and guilt...

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Main Authors: Rob M. A. Nelissen, Marcel Zeelenberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Judgment and Decision Making 2009-12-01
Series:Judgment and Decision Making
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sjdm.org/91001/jdm91001.pdf
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spelling doaj-63b4d8309fa248699e45e779d3a4b70c2021-05-02T03:42:18ZengSociety for Judgment and Decision MakingJudgment and Decision Making1930-29752009-12-0147543553Moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishmentRob M. A. NelissenMarcel ZeelenbergThird-party punishment has recently received attention as an explanation for human altruism. Feelings of anger in response to norm violations are assumed to motivate third-party sanctions, yet there is only sparse and indirect support for this idea. We investigated the impact of both anger and guilt feelings on third-party sanctions. In two studies both emotions were independently manipulated. Results show that anger and guilt independently constitute sufficient but not necessary causes of punishment. Low levels of punishment are observed only when neither emotion is elicited. We discuss the implications of these findings for the functions of altruistic sanctions. http://journal.sjdm.org/91001/jdm91001.pdfthird-party punishmentsocial normsemotionsdecision-making.NAKeywords
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rob M. A. Nelissen
Marcel Zeelenberg
spellingShingle Rob M. A. Nelissen
Marcel Zeelenberg
Moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishment
Judgment and Decision Making
third-party punishment
social norms
emotions
decision-making.NAKeywords
author_facet Rob M. A. Nelissen
Marcel Zeelenberg
author_sort Rob M. A. Nelissen
title Moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishment
title_short Moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishment
title_full Moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishment
title_fullStr Moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishment
title_full_unstemmed Moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishment
title_sort moral emotions as determinants of third-party punishment
publisher Society for Judgment and Decision Making
series Judgment and Decision Making
issn 1930-2975
publishDate 2009-12-01
description Third-party punishment has recently received attention as an explanation for human altruism. Feelings of anger in response to norm violations are assumed to motivate third-party sanctions, yet there is only sparse and indirect support for this idea. We investigated the impact of both anger and guilt feelings on third-party sanctions. In two studies both emotions were independently manipulated. Results show that anger and guilt independently constitute sufficient but not necessary causes of punishment. Low levels of punishment are observed only when neither emotion is elicited. We discuss the implications of these findings for the functions of altruistic sanctions.
topic third-party punishment
social norms
emotions
decision-making.NAKeywords
url http://journal.sjdm.org/91001/jdm91001.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT robmanelissen moralemotionsasdeterminantsofthirdpartypunishment
AT marcelzeelenberg moralemotionsasdeterminantsofthirdpartypunishment
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