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Thursday, December 06, 2007

My Moral Foundations

 
I took the Moral Foundations Questionnaire to see the basis of my morality. My score is shown in green and typical scores for liberals are colored blue. Conservatives are red. (Strange choice of colors, if you ask me.)


What does this mean? Not much really, although the people who run the test think it's important. Here's what they say ...
The scale is a measure of your reliance on and endorsement of five psychological foundations of morality that seem to be found across cultures. Each of the two parts of the scale contained four questions related to each foundation: 1) harm/care, 2) fairness/reciprocity (including issues of rights), 3) ingroup/loyalty, 4) authority/respect, and 5) purity/sanctity.

The idea behind the scale is that human morality is the result of biological and cultural evolutionary processes that made human beings very sensitive to many different (and often competing) issues. Some of these issues are about treating other individuals well (the first two foundations - harm and fairness). Other issues are about how to be a good member of a group or supporter of social order and tradition (the last three foundations). Haidt and Graham have found that political liberals generally place a higher value on the first two foundations; they are very concerned about issues of harm and fairness (including issues of inequality and exploitation). Political conservatives care about harm and fairness too, but they generally score slightly lower on those scale items. The big difference between liberals and conservatives seems to be that conservatives score slightly higher on the ingroup/loyalty foundation, and much higher on the authority/respect and purity/sanctity foundations.

This difference seems to explain many of the most contentious issues in the culture war. For example, liberals support legalizing gay marriage (to be fair and compassionate), whereas many conservatives are reluctant to change the nature of marriage and the family, basic building blocks of society. Conservatives are more likely to favor practices that increase order and respect (e.g., spanking, mandatory pledge of allegiance), whereas liberals often oppose these practices as being violent or coercive.
I love it when they talk about basic foundations of morality and the biological basis of morality and then give tests where people are all over the map. How can we have such differences between liberals and conservatives if these "foundations" are universal and innate? Does this mean that right-wing conservatives were born stupid and there's nothing they can do about it?

That's a scary thought.


[Hat Tip: Gene Expression]

4 comments :

Anonymous said...

I just took the moral foundations test. I scored 3.3 on Harm (Liberals: 3.8, Conservatives: 3.2), 4.1 on fairness (Libs: 3.8, Cons: 3.0), 1.9 on loyalty (Libs: 2.0, Cons: 2.9), 1.6 on Authority (Libs: 2.2, Cons: 3.3), and 0.4 on Purity (Libs: 1.6, Cons: 2.9).

One criticism of the test, though, is that people are just not gonna be that great at answering these questions accurately. It might be better to, rather than asking very general questions, ask a battery of more situation-specific questions which address different moral factors. And even this would be no means be perfect, as people aren't really too fantastic about predicting their own behaviour and emotional responses, but it would nevertheless probably be an improvement.

Anonymous said...

I define myself as a left of centre liberal. I was with the conservatives on harm and fairness and with liberals on loyalty, authority and purity.

I was at the extreme end of the spectrum for each category as well. This is strange as I generally consider myself fairly moderate. This suggests one of two things

1) I don't know myself very well
2) The test is a load of bollocks

Hmmm, which one to choose.

Harriet said...

Colorwise, I think it comes from the convention in the United States to color "Democratic" states blue and "Republican" states red.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for giving a link to the morals site. I explored the site and found that some of the (for lack of a better word) quizes were interesting and illuminating. Trying to rank a list of moral attributes as they apply to your life is difficult but rewarding. Anyway, thanks.