Ordinary citizens are more severe towards verbal than nonverbal hate‑motivated incidents with identical consequences
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Show full item recordEditorial
Nature Briefing
Date
2023-05-02Referencia bibliográfica
Zapata, J., Deroy, O. Ordinary citizens are more severe towards verbal than nonverbal hate-motivated incidents with identical consequences. Sci Rep 13, 7126 (2023). [https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-33892-8]
Sponsorship
Grant from the NOMIS foundation (DISE, Diversity in Social Environments) granted; The Mentoring Programme from the Faculty of Philosophy, Philosophy of Science and Religious Studies Ludwig-Maximilian University of MunichAbstract
Do we judge hate incidents similarly when they are performed using words or bodily actions? Hate
speech incidents are rarely reported by bystanders, and whether or how much they should be
punished remains a matter of legal, theoretical and social disagreement. In a pre-registered study
(N = 1309), participants read about verbal and nonverbal attacks stemming from identical hateful
intent, which created the same consequences for the victims. We asked them how much punishment
the perpetrator should receive, how likely they would be to denounce such an incident and how much
harm they judged the victim suffered. The results contradicted our pre-registered hypotheses and
the predictions of dual moral theories, which hold that intention and harmful consequences are the
sole psychological determinants of punishment. Instead, participants consistently rated verbal hate
attacks as more deserving of punishment, denunciation and being more harmful to the victim than
nonverbal attacks. This difference is explained by the concept of action aversion, suggesting that lay
observers have different intrinsic associations with interactions involving words compared to bodily
actions, regardless of consequences. This explanation has implications for social psychology, moral
theories, and legislative efforts to sanction hate speech, which are considered.