Is Lying Less Wrong in a Foreign Language? Everyday Moral Reasoning and the Moral Foreign Language Effect in the Absence of Outcome Information
Individual author or multiple authors
Individual
Major
Cognitive Science (CGSC)
Category of Work
Comps
Additional Category of Work
Prizes/Awards
Degree
Bachelor of Arts
Class Year
2017
Department or Program
Cognitive Science
Comps Adviser(s)
Galotti, Kathleen; Decker, Jason
Special Recognition
Roy O. Elveton Prize Distinction
Identifier (Includes All Files and Enter All Their Files Name)
soterl_2017_CGSC_paper.pdf, soterl_2017_CGSC_presentation.pdf
Keywords
moral foreign language effect, moral cognition, everyday moral reasoning, deontology, consequentialism, moral psychology
Access
Access restricted to Carleton College faculty or their designees and staff of Institutional Research & Assessment, access controlled by Carleton username and password.
Student Work Completed Date
2017-04-17
Format
application/pdf
Files Uploaded
Text (paper), Presentation
Rights Management
Student author/s retain copyright to this work. Through online submission process, author/s granted Carleton College the non-exclusive rights to preserve this work as part of Carleton's academic history and to use it for teaching purposes and/or institutional research and assessment.