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Veil-of-Ignorance Reasoning Increases Utilitarian Judgment

Deciding from behind a “veil of ignorance” could promote impartial decision-making by blinding the decision maker to information about who will benefit most or least from the available options. Does veil-of-ignorance reasoning influence moral judgment? And if so, how? Across five experiments (n = 5,394), two pre-registered, we find consistent evidence that veil-of-ignorance reasoning increases utilitarian choices, maximizing collective welfare. People who first engaged in veil-of-ignorance reasoning later made more utilitarian choices in a trolley dilemma (Study 1), a medical dilemma (Study 2), a real charity donation (Study 3), and a policy decision concerning the social dilemma of autonomous vehicles (Studies 2 and 4). We provide evidence against a simple anchoring account of these effects (Study 4) and identify an important boundary condition on generalizability (Study 5). These findings may help leaders use veil-of-ignorance reasoning to promote and justify policies that are more impartial and socially beneficial.

Karen Huang
Harvard University
United States

Joshua Greene
Harvard University
United States

Max Bazerman
Harvard University
United States

 

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