Anger, disgust, and presumption of harm as reactions to taboo-breaking behaviors.

Three experiments investigated the relationship between the presumption of harm in harmfree violations of creatural norms (taboos) and the moral emotions of anger and disgust. In Experiment 1, participants made a presumption of harm to others from taboo violations, even in conditions described as harmless and not involving other people; this presumption was predicted by anger and not disgust. Experiment 2 manipulated taboo violation and included a cognitive load task to clarify the post hoc nature of presumption of harm. Experiment 3 was similar but more accurately measured presumed harm. In Experiments 2 and 3, only without load was symbolic harm presumed, indicating its post hoc function to justify moral anger, which was not affected by load. In general, manipulations of harmfulness to others predicted moral anger better than moral disgust, whereas manipulations of taboo predicted disgust better. The presumption of harm was found on measures of symbolic rather than actual harm when a choice existed. These studies clarify understanding of the relationship between emotions and their justification when people consider victimless, offensive acts.

[1]  W. H. Mallock,et al.  The New Republic , 1877 .

[2]  Romin W. Tafarodi,et al.  You can't not believe everything you read. , 1993, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[3]  J. Stainer,et al.  The Emotions , 1922, Nature.

[4]  Craig A. Smith,et al.  Patterns of cognitive appraisal in emotion. , 1985, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[5]  Steven L. Neuberg,et al.  Why people stigmatize: Toward a biocultural framework. , 2000 .

[6]  R. Cornwell,et al.  I am not an animal: mortality salience, disgust, and the denial of human creatureliness. , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[7]  The CAD triad hypothesis: a mapping between three moral emotions (contempt, anger, disgust) and three moral codes (community, autonomy, divinity). , 1999 .

[8]  B. Weiner An attributional theory of motivation and emotion , 1986 .

[9]  K. Scherer,et al.  Appraisal processes in emotion. , 2003 .

[10]  A. Fallon,et al.  A perspective on disgust. , 1987, Psychological review.

[11]  J. Haidt The emotional dog and its rational tail: a social intuitionist approach to moral judgment. , 2001, Psychological review.

[12]  Paul Rozin,et al.  Operation of the laws of sympathetic magic in disgust and other domains. , 1986 .

[13]  Ira J. Roseman Appraisal Determinants of Emotions: Constructing a More Accurate and Comprehensive Theory , 1996 .

[14]  K. Scherer,et al.  Appraisal processes in emotion: Theory, methods, research. , 2001 .

[15]  Richard A. Shweder,et al.  The "big three" of morality (autonomy, community, divinity) and the "big three" explanations of suffering. , 1997 .

[16]  Jonathan Haidt,et al.  Sexual morality: The cultures and emotions of conservatives and liberals. , 2001 .

[17]  Jason Faulkner,et al.  Evolved Disease-Avoidance Processes and Contemporary Anti-Social Behavior: Prejudicial Attitudes and Avoidance of People with Physical Disabilities , 2003 .

[18]  D. Cicchetti Emotion and Adaptation , 1993 .

[19]  Robin L. Nabi The theoretical versus the lay meaning of disgust: Implications for emotion research , 2002 .

[20]  Peter Kuppens,et al.  The appraisal basis of anger: specificity, necessity and sufficiency of components. , 2003, Emotion.

[21]  Andrew Ortony,et al.  The Cognitive Structure of Emotions , 1988 .

[22]  Todd F. Heatherton,et al.  The social psychology of stigma , 2001 .

[23]  N. Sanders,et al.  Journal of behavioral decision making: "The need for contextual and technical knowledge in judgmental forecasting", 5 (1992) 39-52 , 1992 .

[24]  Craig A. Smith,et al.  Appraisal theory: Overview, assumptions, varieties, controversies. , 2001 .

[25]  K. Scherer,et al.  Handbook of affective sciences. , 2003 .

[26]  T. Wickens,et al.  Emotion and Prejudice: Specific Emotions Toward Outgroups , 2007 .

[27]  P. Tetlock,et al.  Rage and reason: the psychology of the intuitive prosecutor , 1999 .

[28]  Eliot R. Smith,et al.  Intergroup emotions: explaining offensive action tendencies in an intergroup context. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[29]  J. Lerner,et al.  Portrait of The Angry Decision Maker: How Appraisal Tendencies Shape Anger's Influence on Cognition. , 2006 .

[30]  J. Haidt,et al.  Affect, culture, and morality, or is it wrong to eat your dog? , 1993, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[31]  K. Widaman,et al.  When Sex Equals AIDS: Symbolic Stigma and Heterosexual Adults' Inaccurate Beliefs about Sexual Transmission of AIDS , 2005 .

[32]  M. Alicke Culpable control and the psychology of blame. , 2000, Psychological bulletin.

[33]  Clark McCauley,et al.  Individual differences in sensitivity to disgust: A scale sampling seven domains of disgust elicitors , 1994 .

[34]  J. Haidt,et al.  The Moral Emotions , 2009 .

[35]  R. Lazarus Relational meaning and discrete emotions. , 2001 .

[36]  P. Rozin,et al.  The CAD triad hypothesis: a mapping between three moral emotions (contempt, anger, disgust) and three moral codes (community, autonomy, divinity). , 1999, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[37]  G. Herek Gender Gaps in Public Opinion about Lesbians and Gay Men , 2002 .

[38]  J. Tangney,et al.  Moral emotions and moral behavior. , 2007, Annual review of psychology.

[39]  D. A. Kenny,et al.  Data analysis in social psychology. , 1998 .

[40]  T. Dalgleish,et al.  Handbook of cognition and emotion , 1999 .

[41]  L. Kohlberg The Philosophy of Moral Development Moral Stages and the Idea of Justice , 1981 .

[42]  Paul Rozin,et al.  Morality and Health , 1999, Nursing History Review.

[43]  J. Greenberg,et al.  Death, sex, love, and neuroticism: why is sex such a problem? , 1999, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[44]  A. E. Crawley,et al.  The Golden Bough: a Study in Magic and Religion , 1911, Nature.

[45]  J. Russell,et al.  Fuzzy concepts in a fuzzy hierarchy: varieties of anger. , 1994, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[46]  M. Zanna,et al.  Establishing a causal chain: why experiments are often more effective than mediational analyses in examining psychological processes. , 2005, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[47]  C. Hendrick,et al.  Group Processes and Intergroup Relations , 1987 .

[48]  Steven L. Neuberg,et al.  INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS AND GROUP PROCESSES Different Emotional Reactions to Different Groups : A Sociofunctional Threat-Based Approach to “ Prejudice ” , 2005 .

[49]  T. Wheatley,et al.  Hypnotic Disgust Makes Moral Judgments More Severe , 2005, Psychological science.

[50]  G. Davey,et al.  The emotional profiling of disgust‐eliciting stimuli: Evidence for primary and complex disgusts , 2004 .

[51]  S. Fiske,et al.  The Handbook of Social Psychology , 1935 .

[52]  M. Jacob Anger , 1988, Thomas Aquinas on the Cardinal Virtues.

[53]  Jonathan Haidt,et al.  Moral dumbfounding: when intuition finds no reason , 2000 .