The moral emotions: a social-functionalist account of anger, disgust, and contempt.

Recent research has highlighted the important role of emotion in moral judgment and decision making (Greene, Sommerville, Nystrom, Darley, & Cohen, 2001; Haidt, 2001). What is less clear is whether distinctions should be drawn among specific moral emotions. Although some have argued for differences among anger, disgust, and contempt (Rozin, Lowery, Imada, & Haidt, 1999), others have suggested that these terms may describe a single undifferentiated emotional response to morally offensive behavior (Nabi, 2002). In this article, we take a social-functionalist perspective, which makes the prediction that these emotions should be differentiable both in antecedent appraisals and in consequent actions and judgments. Studies 1-3 tested and found support for our predictions concerning distinctions among antecedent appraisals, including (a) a more general role for disgust than has been previously been described, (b) an effect of self-relevance on anger but not other emotions, and (c) a role for contempt in judging incompetent actions. Studies 4 and 5 tested and found support for our specific predictions concerning functional outcomes, providing evidence that these emotions are associated with different consequences. Taken together, these studies support a social-functionalist account of anger, disgust, and contempt and lay the foundation for future research on the negative interpersonal emotions.

[1]  J. Henrich,et al.  The weirdest people in the world? , 2010, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[2]  Vladas Griskevicius,et al.  Microbes, mating, and morality: individual differences in three functional domains of disgust. , 2009, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[3]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Liberals and conservatives rely on different sets of moral foundations. , 2009, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[4]  Roman Feiman,et al.  Expressing fear enhances sensory acquisition , 2008, Nature Neuroscience.

[5]  David A. Lishner,et al.  Anger at unfairness: is it moral outrage? , 2007 .

[6]  C. Izard Basic Emotions, Natural Kinds, Emotion Schemas, and a New Paradigm , 2007, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

[7]  Kristen A. Lindquist,et al.  Of Mice and Men: Natural Kinds of Emotions in the Mammalian Brain? A Response to Panksepp and Izard , 2007, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

[8]  Kimberly Costello,et al.  Interpersonal Disgust, Ideological Orientations, and Dehumanization as Predictors of Intergroup Attitudes , 2007, Psychological science.

[9]  S. Fiske,et al.  Dehumanizing the Lowest of the Low , 2006, Psychological science.

[10]  Paul G. Overton,et al.  Is Disgust a Homogeneous Emotion? , 2006 .

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

[12]  L. F. Barrett Are Emotions Natural Kinds? , 2006, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

[13]  Michael J. Constantino,et al.  How Interpersonal Motives Clarify the Meaning of Interpersonal Behavior: A Revised Circumplex Model , 2006, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[14]  Bunmi O. Olatunji,et al.  DISGUST: CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES, SOCIAL MANIFESTATIONS, AND CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS , 2005 .

[15]  Ralph R. Miller,et al.  Altruistic punishing and helping differ in sensitivity to relatedness, friendship, and future interactions , 2005 .

[16]  P. Ekman,et al.  Personality Processes and Individual Differences the Relationship among Expressions, Labels, and Descriptions of Contempt , 2022 .

[17]  D. D. de Quervain,et al.  The Neural Basis of Altruistic Punishment , 2004, Science.

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

[19]  Martha Craven Nussbaum,et al.  Hiding from Humanity: Disgust, Shame, and the Law , 2004 .

[20]  Matthew D. Lieberman,et al.  Does Rejection Hurt? An fMRI Study of Social Exclusion , 2003, Science.

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

[22]  Amy J. C. Cuddy,et al.  A model of (often mixed) stereotype content: competence and warmth respectively follow from perceived status and competition. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

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

[24]  Jonathan D. Cohen,et al.  An fMRI Investigation of Emotional Engagement in Moral Judgment , 2001, Science.

[25]  J. Lerner,et al.  Fear, anger, and risk. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

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

[27]  H. Wagner The accessibility of the term “contempt” and the meaning of the unilateral lip curl , 2000 .

[28]  D. Keltner,et al.  Social Functions of Emotions at Four Levels of Analysis , 1999 .

[29]  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.

[30]  D. Helmeste,et al.  Misinterpretation of facial expression: A cross‐cultural study , 1999, Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences.

[31]  John J. B. Allen,et al.  Anger and frontal brain activity: EEG asymmetry consistent with approach motivation despite negative affective valence. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[32]  C. Dweck,et al.  Implicit theories and conceptions of morality , 1997 .

[33]  P. Rozin,et al.  Body, Psyche, and Culture: The Relationship between Disgust and Morality , 1997 .

[34]  J. Tangney,et al.  Relation of shame and guilt to constructive versus destructive responses to anger across the lifespan. , 1996, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[35]  Ira J. Roseman,et al.  Phenomenology, Behaviors, and Goals Differentiate Discrete Emotions , 1994 .

[36]  J. Gottman What predicts divorce? The relationship between marital processes and marital outcomes. , 1994 .

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

[38]  L. F. Barrett,et al.  Handbook of Emotions , 1993 .

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

[40]  Carolien Martijn,et al.  Negativity and positivity effects in person perception and inference: Ability versus morality , 1992 .

[41]  P. Ekman An argument for basic emotions , 1992 .

[42]  L. Cosmides,et al.  The past explains the present: Emotional adaptations and the structure of ancestral environments , 1990 .

[43]  P. Ekman,et al.  Voluntary facial action generates emotion-specific autonomic nervous system activity. , 1990, Psychophysiology.

[44]  K. Ohbuchi,et al.  Apology as aggression control: its role in mediating appraisal of and response to harm. , 1989, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[45]  John J. Skowronski,et al.  Social judgment and social memory: The role of cue diagnosticity in negativity, positivity, and extremity biases. , 1987 .

[46]  P. Ekman,et al.  A new pan-cultural facial expression of emotion , 1986 .

[47]  M. Coovert,et al.  Revising an Impression of Morality , 1986 .

[48]  J. Averill Anger and Aggression: An Essay on Emotion , 1982 .

[49]  Timothy Leary,et al.  Interpersonal diagnosis of personality : a functional theory and methodology for personality evaluation , 1958 .

[50]  C. Batson,et al.  Pursuing moral outrage: Anger at torture , 2009 .

[51]  Jonathan Haidt,et al.  Social Functionalism and the Evolution of Emotions. , 2006 .

[52]  Douglas T. Kenrick,et al.  Evolution and social psychology. , 2006 .

[53]  Bogdan Wojciszke,et al.  Affective Concomitants of Information on Morality and Competence. , 2005 .

[54]  J. Russell Core affect and the psychological construction of emotion. , 2003, Psychological review.

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

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

[57]  Robin I. M. Dunbar Grooming, Gossip and the Evolution of Language , 1996 .

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

[59]  J. Campos,et al.  Perspectives on emotional development II: A functionalist approach to emotions. , 1987 .

[60]  J. Osofsky Handbook of infant development , 1979 .