Autonomy and the folk concept of valid consent

被引:6
|
作者
Demaree-Cotton, Joanna [1 ]
Sommers, Roseanna [2 ]
机构
[1] Yale Univ, 344 Coll St, New Haven, CT 06511 USA
[2] Univ Michigan, 625 S State St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
关键词
Consent; Moral reasoning; Autonomy; Ownership; Moral psychology; Experimental philosophy; FREE WILL; OWNERSHIP RIGHTS; RESPONSIBILITY; VICTIM; CONCEPTUALIZATIONS; PRESCHOOLERS; ATTRIBUTIONS; JUDGMENTS; ATTITUDES; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1016/j.cognition.2022.105065
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Consent governs innumerable everyday social interactions, including sex, medical exams, the use of property, and economic transactions. Yet little is known about how ordinary people reason about the validity of consent. Across the domains of sex, medicine, and police entry, Study 1 showed that when agents lack autonomous decision-making capacities, participants are less likely to view their consent as valid; however, failing to exercise this capacity and deciding in a nonautonomous way did not reduce consent judgments. Study 2 found that specific and concrete incapacities reduced judgments of valid consent, but failing to exercise these specific capacities did not, even when the consenter makes an irrational and inauthentic decision. Finally, Study 3 showed that the effect of autonomy on judgments of valid consent carries important downstream consequences for moral reasoning about the rights and obligations of third parties, even when the consented-to action is morally wrong. Overall, these findings suggest that laypeople embrace a normative, domain-general concept of valid consent that depends consistently on the possession of autonomous capacities, but not on the exercise of these capacities. Autonomous decisions and autonomous capacities thus play divergent roles in moral reasoning about consent interactions: while the former appears relevant for assessing the wrongfulness of consented-to acts, the latter plays a role in whether consent is regarded as authoritative and therefore as transforming moral rights.
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页数:16
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