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Cultural differences in responses to real-life and hypothetical trolley problems

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TLDR
This article found that Chinese participants were less willing to sacrifice one person to save five others, and less likely to consider such an action to be right, and this cultural difference was more pronounced when the consequences were less severe than death.
Abstract
Trolley problems have been used in the development of moral theory and the psychological study of moral judgments and behavior. Most of this research has focused on people from the West, with implicit assumptions that moral intuitions should generalize and that moral psychology is universal. However, cultural differences may be associated with differences in moral judgments and behavior. We operationalized a trolley problem in the laboratory, with economic incentives and real-life consequences, and compared British and Chinese samples on moral behavior and judgment. We found that Chinese participants were less willing to sacrifice one person to save five others, and less likely to consider such an action to be right. In a second study using three scenarios, including the standard scenario where lives are threatened by an on-coming train, fewer Chinese than British participants were willing to take action and sacrifice one to save five, and this cultural difference was more pronounced when the consequences were less severe than death.

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The social dilemma of autonomous vehicles

TL;DR: Even though participants approve of autonomous vehicles that might sacrifice passengers to save others, respondents would prefer not to ride in such vehicles, and regulating for utilitarian algorithms may paradoxically increase casualties by postponing the adoption of a safer technology.
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The Language of Morals

Stephen Toulmin
- 01 Jan 1954 - 
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Your morals depend on language.

TL;DR: Evidence that people using a foreign language make substantially more utilitarian decisions when faced with moral dilemmas is reported, arguing that this stems from the reduced emotional response elicited by the foreign language, consequently reducing the impact of intuitive emotional concerns.
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What is the Trolley Problem

TL;DR: In this article, the driver of a train hurtling down a railway line is asked to decide whether to steer the train down the side track or continue straight ahead and kill five workers.
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Cultural differences in moral judgment and behavior, across and within societies

TL;DR: This paper reviewed contemporary work on cultural factors affecting moral judgments and values, and those affecting moral behaviors, highlighting examples of within-societal cultural differences in morality, to show that these can be as substantial and important as cross-Societal differences.
References
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An fMRI Investigation of Emotional Engagement in Moral Judgment

TL;DR: It is argued that moral dilemmas vary systematically in the extent to which they engage emotional processing and that these variations in emotional engagement influence moral judgment.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The authors find East Asians to be holistic, attending to the entire field and assigning causality to it, making relatively little use of categories and formal logic, and relying on "dialectical" reasoning, whereas Westerners are more analytic.
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