Apply the Laws, if They are Good: Moral Evaluations Linearly Predict Whether Judges Should Enforce the Law
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Engelmann, Neele; da Franca Couto Fernandes de Almeida, Guilherme; Oliveira de Sousa, Felipe; Prochownik, Karolina; R. Hannikainen, Ivar; Struchiner, Noel; Magen, StefanEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
Experimental jurisprudence Experimental philosophy Legal decision-making Moral judgment
Date
2024-10-23Referencia bibliográfica
Engelmann, N. et. al. Cognitive Science 48 (2024). [https://doi.org/10.1111/cogs.70001]
Sponsorship
Projekt DEAL; DFG-CAPES research grant “Experimental Legal Philosophy: The Concept of Law Revisited” (project number 88881.338585/2019-01, DFG project number: 434400506); SpanishMinistry of Science and Innovation (award number: RYC2020-029280-I); National Council of Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq; grant number: 308757/2022-0); Carlos Chagas Filho Research Support Foundation (FAPERJ; grant number: E-26/201.071/2021); Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES; grant number: 001)Abstract
What should judges do when faced with immoral laws? Should they apply them without exception,
since “the law is the law?” Or can exceptions be made for grossly immoral laws, such as historically,
Nazi law? Surveying laypeople (N = 167) and people with some legal training (N = 141) on these
matters, we find a surprisingly strong, monotonic relationship between people’s subjective moral evaluation
of laws and their judgments that these laws should be applied in concrete cases. This tendency
is most pronounced among individuals who endorse natural law (i.e., the legal-philosophical view that
immoral laws are not valid laws at all), and is attenuated when disagreement about the moral status of
a law is considered reasonable. The relationship is equally strong for laypeople and for those with legal training. We situate our findings within the broader context of morality’s influence on legal reasoning
that experimental jurisprudence has uncovered in recent years, and consider normative implications.