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The five-factor model of the moral foundations theory is stable across WEIRD and non-WEIRD cultures

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The five-factor model of the moral foundations theory is stable across WEIRD and non-WEIRD Cultures.pdf (441.1Kb)
Date
2019
Author
Doğruyol, Burak
Alper, Sinan
Yılmaz, Onurcan
Abstract
Although numerous models attempted to explain the nature of moral judgment, moral foundations theory (MFT) led to a paradigmatic change in this field by proposing pluralist "moralities" (care, fairness, loyalty, authority, sanctity). The five-factor structure of MFT is thought to be universal and rooted in the evolutionary past but the evidence is scarce regarding the stability of this five-factor structure across diverse cultures. We tested this universality argument in a cross-cultural dataset of 30 diverse societies spanning the WEIRD (Western, educated, industrialized, rich, democratic) and non-WEIRD cultures by testing measurement invariance of the short-form of the moral foundations questionnaire. The results supported the original conceptualization that there are at least five diverse moralities although loadings of items differ across WEIRD and non-WEIRD cultures. In other words, the current research shows for the first time that the five-factor structure of MFT is stable in the WEIRD and non-WEIRD cultures.

Source

Personality and Individual Differences

Volume

151

URI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2019.109547
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12469/3520

Collections

  • Araştırma Çıktıları / WOS [1415]
  • Psikoloji / Psychology [71]

Keywords

Moral foundations questionnaire
Measurement invariance
WEIRD and non-WEIRD cultures
Cross-cultural assessment
Moral psychology

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DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Theme by 
@mire NV