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What I don't know can hurt you: Collateral combat damage seems more acceptable when bystander victims are unidentified. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Five experiments with 2,204 participants explored how people respond to a moral dilemma involving a military pilot deciding whether to bomb a dangerous target at the risk of killing an unknown bystander.
  • Results showed that fewer people supported the bombing when the bystander was known to be an innocent civilian, but support increased significantly when the bystander's identity was unknown.
  • Factors influencing this support included overall attitudes towards total war, with UK participants generally opposing bombing more than US participants; this suggests a concerning bias where unidentified bystanders are often presumed guilty.

Article Abstract

Five experiments (N = 2,204) examined responses to a realistic moral dilemma: a military pilot must decide whether to bomb a dangerous enemy target, also killing a bystander. Few people endorsed bombing when the bystander was an innocent civilian; however, when the bystander's identity was unknown, over twice as many people endorsed the bombing. Follow-up studies tested boundary conditions and found the effect to extend beyond modern-day conflicts in the Middle East, showing a similar pattern of judgment for a fictional war. Bombing endorsement was predicted by attitudes towards total war, the theory that there should be no distinction between military and civilian targets in wartime conflict. Bombing endorsement was lower for UK compared to US participants due to differences in total war attitudes. This work has implications for conflicts where unidentified bystanders are common by revealing a potentially deadly bias: people often assume unidentified bystanders are guilty unless proven innocent.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11498727PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0298842PLOS

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