ABSTRACT
People judge that an individual who attempts to harm someone but fails should be blamed and punished more when they imagine how things could have turned out worse, compared to when they imagine how things could have turned out the same, or when they think only about what happened. This moral counterfactual amplification effect occurs when people believe the protagonist had no reason for the attempt to harm, and not when the protagonist had a reason, as Experiment 1 shows. It occurs for intentional failed attempts to harm and also for accidental near-misses, as Experiment 2 shows, but not for failed attempts in which the harm occurs anyway by another cause, for both general judgments about the event and specific judgments about the individual's actions, as Experiments 3 and 4 show. The implications for understanding the role of counterfactual thoughts in moral judgement are discussed.
Acknowledgments
The research was supported by a PhD scholarship from the Irish Research Council (Humanities and Social Sciences) to the first author. We thank Maedhbh Etain Kelly, Jessica Dully, Jennifer Barry and Michael Desmond Collins for help with coding the data. Some of the results were presented at the European Society for Cognitive Psychology annual conference in Cyprus in 2015 and at the Interdisciplinary Workshop on Counterfactual Thinking in Toronto in 2016.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.