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Paper Title

Free Will and Punishment: A Mechanistic View of Human Nature Reduces Retribution

Keywords

  • Free Will
  • Punishment
  • Mechanistic View
  • Human Nature
  • Moral Responsibility
  • Retributive Attitudes
  • Consequentialist Attitudes
  • Neuroscience
  • Neural Basis
  • Human Behavior
  • Attribution Theory
  • Free-Will Beliefs
  • Moral Judgment
  • Criminal Punishment
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 25 | Issue : 8 | Page No : 1563-1570

Published On

June, 2014

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Abstract

If free-will beliefs support attributions of moral responsibility, then reducing these beliefs should make people less retributive in their attitudes about punishment. Four studies tested this prediction using both measured and manipulated free-will beliefs. Study 1 found that people with weaker free-will beliefs endorsed less retributive, but not consequentialist, attitudes regarding punishment of criminals. Subsequent studies showed that learning about the neural bases of human behavior, through either lab-based manipulations or attendance at an undergraduate neuroscience course, reduced people’s support for retributive punishment (Studies 2–4). These results illustrate that exposure to debates about free will and to scientific research on the neural basis of behavior may have consequences for attributions of moral responsibility.

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