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When development constricts our moral circle.

Julia Marshall1, Matti Wilks2, Lucius Caviola3

  • 1Department of Cognitive and Psychological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA. julia_marshall1@brown.edu.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Our moral circle may narrow with age, contrary to popular belief. Younger children show more expansive moral concern for distant others than adults, suggesting an early-emerging tendency to care.

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Area of Science:

  • Moral Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Cognitive Science

Background:

  • The common belief suggests that human moral concern expands from close relations to distant others as individuals mature.
  • This expansion is often attributed to increased reasoning capacity, recognizing the equal moral weight of strangers' suffering.
  • Recent research challenges this view, indicating a more complex developmental trajectory of moral concern.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the developmental changes in the scope of moral concern.
  • To examine whether the moral circle expands or contracts throughout development.
  • To explore the early-emerging tendencies in caring for distant others.

Main Methods:

  • Review of recent empirical research on moral judgment and behavior across different age groups.
  • Analysis of studies comparing moral concern for relationally, physically, and phylogenetically distant others.
  • Comparative assessment of younger children versus older children and adults in moral decision-making.

Main Results:

  • Younger children exhibit a more expansive moral circle than older children and adults in several domains.
  • Children are more inclined to consider distant others worthy of help or protection compared to older individuals.
  • Developmental processes may lead to a narrowing, rather than widening, of the moral circle in certain contexts.

Conclusions:

  • Developmental changes in moral concern are counterintuitive, potentially narrowing the moral circle.
  • An early-emerging tendency to care for distant others exists in humans.
  • Future research should consider this early-emerging tendency alongside efforts to overcome biases against distant others.