Pages that link to "Q41978090"
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The following pages link to Benefiting from misfortune: when harmless actions are judged to be morally blameworthy (Q41978090):
Displaying 16 items.
- Truth, control, and value motivations: the "what," "how," and "why" of approach and avoidance (Q26830319) (← links)
- Moral judgment as information processing: an integrative review (Q28084464) (← links)
- Whose mind matters more--the agent or the artist? An investigation of ethical and aesthetic evaluations (Q28680782) (← links)
- A person-centered approach to moral judgment. (Q30374101) (← links)
- Attributions of Responsibility and Blame for Procrastination Behavior (Q30392049) (← links)
- Harming ourselves and defiling others: what determines a moral domain? (Q34990002) (← links)
- Inferences about moral character moderate the impact of consequences on blame and praise (Q41638234) (← links)
- Moral transgressions corrupt neural representations of value (Q43019567) (← links)
- Information-Acquisition Processes in Moral Judgments of Blame (Q47321033) (← links)
- Pleasure From Another's Pain: The Influence of a Target's Hedonic States on Attributions of Immorality and Evil (Q47422512) (← links)
- Mind attributions about moral actors: intentionality is greater given coherent cues (Q47755354) (← links)
- Eager feelings and vigilant reasons: Regulatory focus differences in judging moral wrongs. (Q53714664) (← links)
- Alexithymia increases moral acceptability of accidental harms (Q55336976) (← links)
- How the Mind Matters for Morality (Q58106777) (← links)
- Asymmetric morality: Blame is more differentiated and more extreme than praise (Q64105093) (← links)
- The Psychology of Morality: A Review and Analysis of Empirical Studies Published From 1940 Through 2017 (Q64357078) (← links)