|
When Death Is on the Docket, the Moral Compass Wavers by bucy at 12:26 pm EST, Feb 7, 2006 |
Common wisdom holds that people have a set standard of morality that never wavers. Yet studies of people who do unpalatable things, whether by choice, or for reasons of duty or economic necessity, find that people's moral codes are more flexible than generally understood. To buffer themselves from their own consciences, people often adjust their moral judgments in a process some psychologists call moral disengagement, or moral distancing.
|
|
|