Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Y. Zhang , Kaiping Peng , Linchuan Liao , L. Xu , Clifford Geertz
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Wuhan University, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA
ANO 1996
TIPO Book
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 1604689e21a239da4fa9fd33912e19c8
MD5 C7A9D59BB260098CED2412669459FAA0
MD5 EEF6CA16347B7292DA928895FF3512BD
MD5 6C8D04D82B84E7C75FB9F6F792FD3314
MD5 FDBB82904E2B070C2B425A8A691C25ED

Resumo

Globalization has contributed to an increase of culture mixing. Prior research has shown that culture mixing may evoke disgust responses, and disgust can lead to harsher moral judgments. Whether and how culture mixing influences moral judgments, however, remains unknown. Therefore, the present research examines the effect of culture mixing on moral judgments and explores the underlying psychological mechanism. Across three studies, our findings demonstrate that exposure to culture mixing leads to harsher moral judgments. Specifically, participants exposed to culture-mixing images demonstrated harsher moral judgments of actions in impurity-relevant moral scenarios (Study 1). In addition, mediation analysis indicates that the effect of culture mixing on moral judgments is mediated by disgust (Study 2), with this mediating effect being observed exclusively in impurity-relevant moral scenarios (Study 3). Implications of the current research for understanding the relationship between culture mixing and morality are discussed, and recommendations for future research avenues are provided.

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