Social roles and the moral judgement of acts and omissions

Three experiments investigated how moral judgements of harmful acts and omissions are affected by information about social roles. Subjects were given vignettes in which the relationship between an actor and victim was varied along the dimensions of solidarity (e.g. friends versus strangers) and hierachy (e.g. superior versus equal ; the terms are from Hamilton & Sanders, 1981). Subjects were asked to judge the morality of the actor in each case, both for a harmful omission (e.g. intentionally withholding the truth) and for an equivalent act (e.g. actively lying). Subjects judged the bahaviour worse in the act than the omission. Judgements were also affected by role relationships. The act-omission difference was also greater in the low-responsibility roles. Responses to the high-responsibility roles seem to reflect in a consequentialist perspective, focusing on outcomes rather than prohibitions.

[1]  E. Weinrib The Case for a Duty to Rescue , 1980 .

[2]  J. Baron,et al.  Omission and commission in judgment and choice , 1991 .

[3]  F. Feldbrugge Good and bad Samaritans: a comparative survey of criminal law provisions concerning failure to rescue , 1965 .

[4]  V. Hamilton,et al.  The Effect of Roles and Deeds on Responsibility Judgments: The Normative Structure of Wrongdoing , 1981 .

[5]  B. Cocroft,et al.  Book reviewStructures of social life: the four elementary forms of human relations: Alan Page Fiske New York: Macmillan Inc., 1991, 480 pp., $29.95 (cloth) , 1994 .

[6]  J. Baron,et al.  The effect of normative beliefs on anticipated emotions. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[7]  John Sabini,et al.  Moralities of Everyday Life , 1982 .

[8]  V. Hamilton,et al.  Everyday Justice: Responsibility and the Individual in Japan and the United States. , 1992 .

[9]  T. Nagel The view from nowhere , 1987 .

[10]  J. Kleinig Criminal Liability for Failures to Act , 1986 .

[11]  Nick Haslam,et al.  Categories of social relationship , 1994, Cognition.

[12]  Jonathan Baron,et al.  Behavioral Law and Economics: Reluctance to Vaccinate: Omission Bias and Ambiguity , 1990 .

[13]  V. Hamilton,et al.  Who is responsible? Toward a social psychology of responsibility attribution. , 1978 .

[14]  J. G. Miller,et al.  Perceptions of social responsibilities in India and in the United States: moral imperatives or personal decisions? , 1990, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[15]  M. Clark,et al.  Interpersonal attraction in exchange and communal relationships. , 1979 .

[16]  H. Hart Punishment and responsibility , 1969 .