A Painful Message

Eyal Aharoni, D. Simpson, Eddy A. Nahmias, M. Gollwitzer
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Abstract. This preregistered experiment examined two proximate drivers of retributive punishment attitudes: the motivation to make the perpetrator suffer, and understand the wrongfulness of his offense. In a sample of 514 US adults, we presented criminal case summaries that varied the level of suffering (absent vs. present) and understanding (absent vs. present) experienced by the perpetrator and measured punishment judgments and attitudes. Our results demonstrate, as predicted, that participants were more satisfied by the sentence and less punitive when they believed that the perpetrator had suffered from the punishment or that he understood the wrongfulness of his actions. This pattern held across crimes of varying seriousness (theft vs. aggravated robbery) and across two narrative perspectives (participant as victim vs. participant as third party). However, joint evidence of suffering and understanding did not strengthen this effect, contrary to predictions. We discuss the implications of these findings for leading philosophical theories of punishment.
痛苦的信息
摘要这个预先注册的实验考察了报应性惩罚态度的两个近似驱动因素:让犯罪者受苦的动机,以及理解他的罪行的不法性。在514名美国成年人的样本中,我们提出了刑事案件摘要,这些案例总结了犯罪者所经历的不同程度的痛苦(缺席与在场)和理解(缺席与在场),并测量了惩罚判断和态度。我们的结果表明,正如预测的那样,当参与者相信犯罪者遭受了惩罚或他明白自己的行为是错误的时,他们对判决更满意,惩罚更少。这种模式适用于不同严重程度的犯罪(盗窃vs.加重抢劫)和两种叙述视角(参与者作为受害者vs.参与者作为第三方)。然而,与预测相反,痛苦和理解的共同证据并没有加强这种效果。我们将讨论这些发现对主要的惩罚哲学理论的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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