TY - JOUR
T1 - (Ir)rationality of Moral Judgment
AU - Regenwetter, Michel
AU - Currie, Brittney
AU - Huang, Yu
AU - Smeulders, Bart
AU - Carlson, Anna K.
N1 - This work was supported by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Campus Research Board grant RB19153 and Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative grant W911NF-20-1-0252 from the Army Research Office. The Research Board and ARO had no other role besides financial support. The views and conclusions contained herein are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing the official policies, either expressed or implied, of the UIUC Campus Research Board, the U.S. Army Research Office, or of the authors\u2019 home institutions. The U.S. government is authorized to reproduce and distribute reprints for government purposes notwithstanding any copyright notation herein.
PY - 2025/3/4
Y1 - 2025/3/4
N2 - Chaotic responses to COVID-19, political polarization, and pervasive misinformation raise the question of whether some or many individuals exercise irrational moral judgment. We provide the first mathematically correct test for transitivity of moral preferences. Transitivity is the most prominent rationality criterion of the behavioral, biological, and economic sciences. However, transitivity is conceptually, mathematically, and statistically difficult to evaluate empirically. We tested three parsimonious, order-constrained, probabilistic characterizations: First, the weak utility model treats an individual’s choices as noisy reflections of a single, deterministic, underlying transitive preference; second, a variant severely limits the allowable response noise; and third, by the general random utility hypothesis, individuals’ choices reveal uncertain, but transitive, moral preferences. Among 28 individuals, everyone’s data were consistent with the weak utility model and general random utility model, thus supporting both operationalizations. Tightening the bounds on error rates in noisy responses yielded a poorly performing model, thus rejecting the model according to which choices are highly consistent with a single transitive preference. Bayesian model selection favored probabilistic transitive preferences and hence the equivalent random utility hypothesis. This suggests that there is some order underlying the apparent chaos: Rather than presume widespread disregard for moral principles, policymakers may build on navigating and reconciling extreme heterogeneity compounded with individual uncertainty.
AB - Chaotic responses to COVID-19, political polarization, and pervasive misinformation raise the question of whether some or many individuals exercise irrational moral judgment. We provide the first mathematically correct test for transitivity of moral preferences. Transitivity is the most prominent rationality criterion of the behavioral, biological, and economic sciences. However, transitivity is conceptually, mathematically, and statistically difficult to evaluate empirically. We tested three parsimonious, order-constrained, probabilistic characterizations: First, the weak utility model treats an individual’s choices as noisy reflections of a single, deterministic, underlying transitive preference; second, a variant severely limits the allowable response noise; and third, by the general random utility hypothesis, individuals’ choices reveal uncertain, but transitive, moral preferences. Among 28 individuals, everyone’s data were consistent with the weak utility model and general random utility model, thus supporting both operationalizations. Tightening the bounds on error rates in noisy responses yielded a poorly performing model, thus rejecting the model according to which choices are highly consistent with a single transitive preference. Bayesian model selection favored probabilistic transitive preferences and hence the equivalent random utility hypothesis. This suggests that there is some order underlying the apparent chaos: Rather than presume widespread disregard for moral principles, policymakers may build on navigating and reconciling extreme heterogeneity compounded with individual uncertainty.
KW - general random utility hypothesis
KW - order-constrained Bayesian inference
KW - political preferences
KW - rationality
KW - weak stochastic transitivity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105000182568&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1177/17456916241260611
DO - 10.1177/17456916241260611
M3 - Article
C2 - 40035519
AN - SCOPUS:105000182568
SN - 1745-6916
JO - Perspectives on Psychological Science
JF - Perspectives on Psychological Science
ER -