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Diminished Sense Of Moral Outrage Key To Holding View That World Is Fair And Just, Study Shows

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razors edge Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-01-07 11:38 PM
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Diminished Sense Of Moral Outrage Key To Holding View That World Is Fair And Just, Study Shows
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/02/070228123213.htm

People who see the world as essentially fair can just maintain this perception through a diminished sense of moral outrage, according to a study by researchers in New York University's Department of Psychology. The findings appear in the March issue of the journal Psychological Science, which is published by the Association for Psychological Science.

Psychologists have long studied system-justification theory, which posits that people adopt belief systems that justify existing political, economic, and social situations or inequities in order to make themselves feel better about the status quo. Moreover, in order to maintain their perceptions of the world as just, people resist changes that would increase the overall amount of fairness and equality in the system. Instead, they often engage in cognitive adjustments that preserve a distorted image of reality in which existing institutions are seen as more equitable and just than they are.

The NYU research sought to explain how individuals make these cognitive adjustments in maintaining their world view, despite evidence of ongoing social and economic inequality. In the first part of the study--an experiment involving a series of questions and scenarios--the researchers found that the more people endorsed anti-egalitarian beliefs, the less guilt and moral outrage they felt. The reduction in moral outrage (but not guilt) led them to show decreased support for helping the disadvantaged and redistributing resources.

In the second part of the research, the team presented half of the study's subjects with Horatio Alger, rags-to-riches stories, which implicitly endorse system-justification beliefs, and half with stories describing the plight of innocent victims, which underscore the unfairness of the system. The results showed that subjects exposed to the rags-to-riches stories reported less negative affect and less moral outrage than subjects exposed to the innocent-victim essays. As with the first study, moral outrage mediated the effect of system justification on support for redistribution, but general negative affect did not.

"These results demonstrate both the existence of palliative consequences of ideology and their impact," said NYU graduate student Cheryl J. Wakslak, the study's lead author. "These results show that people who see the world as essentially fair and just can maintain this perspective if their sense of moral outrage is diminished."

End of article
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KT2000 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-01-07 11:50 PM
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1. This explains a lot
Unfortunately. Maybe a politician such as * and his minions have learned to play on that by offering patriotism when they are serving up torture and all the rest.

I recall reading that people read and accept those things that reinforce their pre-existing world view and ignore that which doesn't.
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libodem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 12:18 AM
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2. facinating
Life's abitch and then ya die.
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lligrd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 12:42 AM
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3. Very Interesting
and it might just explain why so many are not as outraged as I am. And I am just cynical enough to belief that this research will be used to help keep us from being outraged by even more unfairness by the very people perpetrating it.
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w4rma Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 02:12 AM
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4. The journal article is located here (You'll have to get it from the library or wait a year)
Edited on Fri Mar-02-07 02:18 AM by w4rma
Jost, J.T., Pietrzak, J., Liviatan, I., Mandisodza, A., & Napier, J. (2007). System justification as conscious and nonconscious goal pursuit. In J. Shah & W. Gardner (Eds.), Handbook of Motivation Science. New York: Guilford
http://psych.nyu.edu/jost/

In the meantime here is another study from two years ago, on a similar theme with a more limited scope, by the same leading scientist:
http://psych.nyu.edu/jost/Jost%20&%20Hunyady%20%282005%29%20Antecedents%20and%20Consequences%20of%20Syste.pdf
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