Mapping Morality with a Compass: Testing the Theory of ‘Morality-as-Cooperation’ with a New Questionnaire

Publication date

2019

Authors

Curry, Oliver Scott
Jones Chesters, Matthew
van Lissa, Caspar J.ISNI 0000000492906669

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Morality-as-Cooperation (MAC) is the theory that morality is a collection of biological and cultural solutions to the problems of cooperation recurrent in human social life. MAC uses game theory to identify distinct types of cooperation, and predicts that each will be considered morally relevant, and each will give rise to a distinct moral domain. Here we test MAC's predictions by developing a new self-report measure of morality, the Morality-as-Cooperation Questionnaire (MAC-Q), and comparing its psychometric properties to those of the Moral Foundations Questionnaire (MFQ). Over four studies, the results support the MAC-Q's seven-factor model of morality, but not the MFQ's five-factor model. Thus MAC emerges as the best available compass with which to explore the moral landscape.

Keywords

Morality, Cooperation, Game theory, Moral foundations, Scale development

Citation

Curry, O S, Jones Chesters, M & Van Lissa, C J 2019, 'Mapping Morality with a Compass: Testing the Theory of ‘Morality-as-Cooperation’ with a New Questionnaire', Journal of Research in Personality, vol. 78, pp. 106-124. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2018.10.008