Publication | Closed Access
Blaming, praising, and protecting our humanity: The implications of everyday dehumanization for judgments of moral status
181
Citations
24
References
2010
Year
Moral ReasoningMoral ValueMoral PhilosophySocial PsychologyMoral IssuePsychologySocial SciencesSocial IdentityMoral DevelopmentApplied Social PsychologyCross-cultural EthicsEveryday DehumanizationMoral PsychologyCultureProsocial BehaviorMoral NormsParticular Moral StatusNormative EthicMoral Status
Being human implies a particular moral status: having moral value, agency, and responsibility. However, people are not seen as equally human. Across two studies, we examine the consequences that subtle variations in the perceived humanness of actors or groups have for their perceived moral status. Drawing on Haslam's two-dimensional model of humanness and focusing on three ways people may be considered to have moral status - moral patiency (value), agency, or responsibility - we demonstrate that subtly denying humanness to others has implications for whether they are blamed, praised, or considered worthy of moral concern and rehabilitation. Moreover, we show that distinct human characteristics are linked to specific judgments of moral status. This work demonstrates that everyday judgments of moral status are influenced by perceptions of humanness.
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