|
Graham, J., Haidt, J., & Nosek, B. A. (2009). Liberals and conservatives rely on different sets of moral foundations. Journal of personality and social psychology, 96(5), 1029.
26-items (8 pt.)
1) $0 (I would do it for free)
2) $10
3) $100
4) $1,000
5) $10,000
6) $100,000
7) A million dollars
8) Never for any amount of money
- Harm
1. Kick a dog in the head, hard
2. Shoot and kill an animal that is a member of an endangered species
3. make cruel remarks to an overweight person about his or her appearance
4. Step on an ant hill, killing thousands of ants
5. Stick a pin into the palm of a child you don't know
- Fairness
6. Cheat in a game of cards played for money with some people you don't know well
7. Steal from a poor person and use the money to buy a gift for a rich person
8. Say no to a friend's request to help him move into a new apartment, after he helped you move the month before
9. Throw out a box of ballots, during an election, to help your favored candidate win
10. Sign a secret-but-binding pledge to only hire people of your race in your company
- Ingroup
11. Publicly bet against your favorite sports team (so that lots of people know)
12. Burn your country's flag, in private (nobody else sees you)
13. Say something bad about your nation (which you don't believe to be true) while calling in, anonymously, to a talk-radio show in a foreign nation
14. Break off all communications with your immediate and extended family for 1 year
15. Renounce your citizenship and become a citizen of another country
16. Leave the social group, club, or team that you most value
- Authority
17. Curse your parents, to their face (you can apologize and explain 1 year later)
18. Curse the founders or early heroes of your country (in private, nobody hears you)
19. Make a disrespectful hand gesture to your boss, teacher, or professor
20. Throw a rotten tomato at a political leader you dislike (remember, you will not get caught)
21. Slap your father in the face (with his permission) as part of a comedy skit
- Purity
22. Sign a piece of paper that says "I hereby sell my soul, after my death, to whoever has this piece of paper"
23. Cook and eat your dog, after it dies of natural causes
24. Get plastic surgery that adds a 2-inch tail on to the end of your spine
25. Get a blood transfusion of 1 pint of desease-free, compatible blood from a convincted child molester
26. Attend a performance art piece in which all participants (including you) have to act like animals for 30 minutes, including crawling around naked and urinating on stage
MFQ (MFQ-S)
Graham, J., Nosek, B. A., Haidt, J., Iyer, R., Koleva, S., & Ditto, P. H. (2011). Mapping the moral domain. Journal of personality and social psychology, 101(2), 366.
(An asterisk indicates that the item is also included in the 20 item short-form MFQ.)
Part I: Moral Relevance
15-items (6 pt.)
- Harm
1. Emotionally - Whether or not someone suffered emotionally *
2. Weak - Whether or not someone cared for someone weak or vulnerable *
3. Cruel - Whether or not someone was cruel
- Fairness
4. Treated - Whether or not some people were treated differently from others *
5. Unfairly - Whether or not someone acted unfairly *
6. Rights - Whether or not someone was denied his or her rights
- Ingroup
7. LoveCountry - Whether or not someone's action showed love for his or her country *
8. Betray - Whether or not someone did something to betray his or her group *
9. Loyalty - Whether or not someone showed a lack of loyalty
- Authority
10. Respect - Whether or not someone showed a lack of respect for authority *
11. Traditions - Whether or not someone conformed to the traiditions of society *
12. Chaos - Whether or not an action caused chaos or disorder
- Purity
13. Decency - Whether or not someone violated standards of purity and decency *
14. Disgusting - Whether or not someone did something disgusting *
15. God - Whether or not someone acted in a way that God would approve of
Part II: Moral Judgments
15-items (6 pt.)
- Harm
1. Compassion - Compassion for those who are suffering is the most crucial virtue. *
2. Animal - One of the worst things a person could do is hurt a defenseless animal. *
3. Kill - It can never be right to kill a human being.
- Fairness
4. Fairly - When the government makes laws, the number one principle should be ensuring that everyone is treated fairly. *
5. Justice - Justice is the most important requirement for a society. *
6. Rich - I think it is morally wrong that rich children inherit a lot of money while poor children inherit nothing.
- Ingroup
7. History - I am proud of my country's history. *
8. Family - People should be loyal to their family members, even when they have done something wrong. *
9. Team - It is more important to be a team player than to express oneself.
- Authority
10. KidRespect - Respect for authority is something all children need to learn. *
11. SexRoles - Men and women each have different roles to play in society. *
12. Soldier - If I were a soldier and disagreed with my commanding officer's orders, I would obey anyway because that is my duty.
- Purity
13. HarmlessDG - People should not do things that are disgusting, even if no one is harmed. *
14. Unnatural - I would call some acts wrong on the grounds that they are unnatural. *
15. Chastity - Chastity is an important and valuable virtue.
Montada, L., Schmitt, M., & Dalbert, C. (1986). Thinking about justice and dealing with one's own privileges: A study of existential guilt. In H. W. Bierhoff, R. L. Cohen J. Greenberg (Eds), Justice in social relations (pp. 125-143). New York: Plenum Press.
- Moral Outrage
10-items (6 pt.)
1. I feel really angry when I learn about people who are suffering from injustice.
2. I believe that we should all work together to help those who are disadvantaged.
3. I feel morally outraged by social injustice.
4. I resent the fact that people have to suffer unjustly the consequences of unemployment.
5. I think it is shameful that people allow injustice to occur.
6. I am horrified when I hear about the filthy living conditions which some people must live in because they are poor.
7. I don't worry very much about the problems in this world. ⓡ
8. I rarely feel burdened by the unfairness of this world. ⓡ
9. Issues of social justice rarely cross my mind. ⓡ
10. I tend to tune out when people talk about problems in our society. ⓡ