"... As you would have them do unto you": Does imagining yourself in the other's place stimulate moral action?

C Daniel Batson, David A Lishner, Amy Carpenter, Luis Dulin, Sanna Harjusola-Webb, E L Stocks, Shawna Gale, Omar Hassan, Brenda Sampat
Author Information
  1. C Daniel Batson: Department of Psychology, University of Kansas, Lawrence 66045, USA. dbatson@ku.edu

Abstract

Philosophers, psychologists, and religious teachers have suggested that imagining yourself in another's place will stimulate moral action. The authors tested this idea in two different situations. In Experiment 1, participants had the opportunity to assign themselves and another research participant to tasks, with one task clearly more desirable than the other. Imagining oneself in the other's place did little to increase the morality (fairness) of the decision. A different form of perspective taking, imagining the other's feelings, increased direct assignment of the other to the desirable task, apparently due to increased empathy. In Experiment 2, participants confronted a different decision: either accept an initial task assignment that would give them highly positive consequences and the other participant nothing or change the assignment so they and the other would each receive moderately positive consequences. In this situation, imagining oneself in the other's place did significantly increase moral action.

MeSH Term

Adult
Empathy
Female
Humans
Male
Morals
Projection
Social Perception

Word Cloud

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