Authors
Cory J Clark, Jamie B Luguri, Peter H Ditto, Joshua Knobe, Azim F Shariff, Roy F Baumeister
Publication date
2014/4
Journal
Journal of personality and social psychology
Volume
106
Issue
4
Pages
501
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Belief in free will is a pervasive phenomenon that has important consequences for prosocial actions and punitive judgments, but little research has investigated why free will beliefs are so widespread. Across 5 studies using experimental, survey, and archival data and multiple measures of free will belief, we tested the hypothesis that a key factor promoting belief in free will is a fundamental desire to hold others morally responsible for their wrongful behaviors. In Study 1, participants reported greater belief in free will after considering an immoral action than a morally neutral one. Study 2 provided evidence that this effect was due to heightened punitive motivations. In a field experiment (Study 3), an ostensibly real classroom cheating incident led to increased free will beliefs, again due to heightened punitive motivations. In Study 4, reading about others’ immoral behaviors reduced the perceived merit of anti-free-will …
Total citations
2014201520162017201820192020202120222023202439172563291833352318
Scholar articles
CJ Clark, JB Luguri, PH Ditto, J Knobe, AF Shariff… - Journal of personality and social psychology, 2014