The Dimensionality of the Moral Foundations: Contributions from the Moral Foundations Sacredness Scale in Four Societies.

J Pers Assess

Centro de Investigação em Psicologia para o Desenvolvimento (CIPD), Porto, Portugal.

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Moral Foundations Theory suggests five innate modules that shape our moral judgments, with initial instruments like the MFV and MFQ-30 focusing on more rational moral reasoning.
  • A new scale, the Moral Foundations Sacredness Scale (MFSS), was created to better capture intuitive and emotional moral responses, but previous studies struggled to establish a clear structure and measurement consistency for it.
  • Our research analyzed the MFSS across different adult samples and found a two-factor solution that was reliable and valid, highlighting key relationships with belief in God and religious behavior, thereby advancing the understanding of moral foundations.

Article Abstract

Moral Foundations Theory proposes that five innate modules offer an intuitive response that drives our moral judgments. Various instruments were developed to measure the five moral foundations, including the MFV and the MFQ-30 which focus on deliberative moral reasoning. This approach is limited because intuitions are more basic and affect-laden. The Moral Foundations Sacredness Scale (MFSS) was designed to elicit responses that more closely resemble these phenomena. However, studies have not converged on a factorial structure for the MFSS, and measurement invariance has never been assessed. Our study sought to evaluate these properties across four adult samples, Exploratory Structural Equation Modeling, and the associations between the MFSS's scales and relevant constructs. We found that a two-factor solution, reflecting the individualizing and binding foundations, had a reasonable fit, and had invariance (configural, metric, and scalar) across gender, age groups, and (configural) four international samples. The scales were reliable, had construct validity with the MFQ-30, and criterion-related validity with the binding moderately predicting belief in God/spirit and religious behaviors. The convergence we found regarding the MFSS's factorial structure across groups has important implications for the dimensionality of these constructs, and - ultimately - for the development of Moral Foundations Theory.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00223891.2023.2245895DOI Listing

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