Continuing the last post, the abstract from this paper:
"Moral foundations theorists propose that the moral domain should
include not only ‘‘liberal’’ ethics of justice and care but also
ostensibly ‘‘conservative’’ concerns about the virtues of ingroup
loyalty, obedience to authority, and enforcement of purity standards.
This proposal clashes with decades of research in political
psychology connecting the latter set of characteristics to ‘‘the
authoritarian personality.’’ We demonstrate that liberal-conservative
differences in moral intuitions are statistically mediated by
authoritarianism and social dominance orientation, so that
conservatives’ greater valuation of ingroup, authority, and purity
concerns is attributable to higher levels of authoritarianism, whereas
liberals’ greater valuation of fairness and harm avoidance is
attributable to lower levels of social dominance. We also find that
ingroup, authority, and purity concerns are positively associated with
intergroup hostility and support for discrimination, whereas concerns
about fairness and harm avoidance are negatively associated with these
variables. These findings might lead some to question the wisdom and
appropriateness of efforts to ‘‘broaden’’ scientific conceptions of
morality in such a way that preferences based on authoritarianism and
social dominance are treated as moral rather than amoral or even
immoral—and suggest that the explicit goal of incorporating conservative
ideology into the study of moral psychology (in order to increase
ideological diversity) may lead researchers astray."
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