Journal article
The evolutionary stability of moral foundations
- Abstract:
- Moral foundations theory is an influential empirical description of moral perception. According to this theory, individuals make moral judgments based on five distinct “moral foundations”: care, fairness, loyalty, authority, and sanctity. We provide a theory that explores the claimed evolutionary basis for these moral foundations. The theory conceptualizes these five moral foundations as specific modifications of fitness payoffs in a 2 × 2 game. We find that the five foundations are distinguishable from each other and evolutionarily stable. However, they are not a minimal set: strict subsets of the foundations suffice to describe all preferences that are evolutionarily stable. Not all evolutionarily stable foundations deliver social fitness improvement over the Nash equilibrium in the fitness game: we characterize which do. Finally, we study moral overdrive, that is, the situation in which the moral component of preferences totally dominates fitness payoffs and drives decision making entirely. While every one of the five foundations is compatible with moral overdrive in at least one fitness game, there is no fitness game in which moral overdrive is compatible with social fitness improvement. These results are partially extended to n × n games. We derive two testable implications from the theory and find empirical support for them.
- Publication status:
- Published
- Peer review status:
- Peer reviewed
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(Preview, Version of record, pdf, 1.7MB, Terms of use)
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(Preview, Supplementary materials, pdf, 765.9KB, Terms of use)
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- Publisher copy:
- 10.1093/qje/qjaf019
Authors
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
- Journal:
- Quarterly Journal of Economics More from this journal
- Volume:
- 140
- Issue:
- 3
- Pages:
- 2459–2506
- Publication date:
- 2025-04-11
- Acceptance date:
- 2025-03-24
- DOI:
- EISSN:
-
1531-4650
- ISSN:
-
0033-5533
- Language:
-
English
- Pubs id:
-
2100669
- Local pid:
-
pubs:2100669
- Deposit date:
-
2025-03-27
Terms of use
- Copyright holder:
- Avataneo et al
- Copyright date:
- 2025
- Rights statement:
- © The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of President and Fellows of Harvard College. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
- Licence:
- CC Attribution (CC BY)
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