PoliPsych.com Exploring Political Attitudes Through Moral Psychology

23Jul/105

On Hyperpartisanship, Hypermoralism, and the Supernormal Stimuli of Modern Politics

Today's lead story from Politico, The Age of Rage, probably summarizes a lot of what people think is wrong with politics. Rather than make good policy, politicians and media are more concerned with scoring points for their political ideology (hyperpartisanship). However, as the Politico article points out, their actions are largely driven by the general populace. Politicians and media reflect what people respond to, which happens to be hyperpartisanship, rather than causing the incivility we see.

...there are two big incentives that drive behavior at the intersection where politics meets media. One is public attention. The other is money. Experience shows there’s lots more of both to be had by engaging in extreme partisan behavior.

Fox News has soared on the strength of commentators like Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity, both of whom fanned the Sherrod story on the strength of the misleading Breitbart video. (A Fox senior executive, by contrast, urged the news side of the operation to get Sherrod’s response before going with the story, The Washington Post reported.) On the left, MSNBC is trying to emulate the success of primetime partisanship. Meanwhile, CNN, which has largely strived toward a neutral ideological posture, is battling steady relative declines in its audience.

If media executives hunger for ratings, politicians hunger for campaign cash and fame.

Obama put it best earlier this year, after Republican Rep. Joe Wilson of South Carolina shouted “you lie” during the president's State of the Union speech. "The easiest way to get on television right now is to be really rude,” the president told ABC News.

Indeed, at first Wilson seemed embarrassed and apologized for his outburst. But within days, Wilson and his opponent were both flooded with campaign contributions; Wilson took in more than $700,000 in the immediate aftermath of his outburst and was a guest of honor on Hannity’s show and Fox News Sunday.

We reward politicians and news organizations, with our attention and our money, that engage in the very incivility that makes politics so ugly. This is true on both sides of the aisle.

At the recent meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Linda Skitka gave a talk which puts a lot of this in perspective for me. Her lab studies the dark side of moral conviction, which I call hypermoralism in the hope that the term catches on. Roy Baumeister studies a similar concept, idealistic evil. In Skitka's talk, she demonstrates in a Chinese sample that political intolerance (e.g. "people with different positions than your own about this issue should be allowed to have their phones tapped by the Chinese government") and social intolerance (e.g. "How willing would you be to have someone who did not share your views on this issue as a close personal friend?") were best predicted by moral conviction (e.g. "To what extent are your feelings about this issue or policy based on your fundamental beliefs about right and wrong?").  When controlling for moral conviction, all other variables (e.g. demographics, political position, attitude importance, and attitude strength) were all insignificant predictors of social and political intolerance. I look forward to seeing how this replicates on a US sample and how political intolerance is operationalized. Perhaps something along the lines of liberal consideration of censoring Fox news or conservative publication of what many would consider private discussion would make good operationalizations of political intolerance as they mirror what we see in reality, where considerations of privacy, context, and free speech are considered secondary to partisanship. Moral conviction may underlie the hyperpartisanship that Politico talks about.

Hyperpartisanship and hypermoralism may be another instance of the effects of what evolutionary psychologist Deirdre Barrett calls "Supernormal Stimuli". As the Wall Street Journal writes about her book:

As Ms. Barrett notes, modern life surrounds us with supernormal stimuli. An example: Humans evolved strong tastes for fats and sweets, tastes that conferred a reproductive advantage in the days when starvation was common. But these tastes can be a burden when we're confronted with such supernormal stimuli as the 400-calorie Frappuccino at Starbucks. An evolutionary adaptation that once promised survival is more likely nowadays to produce Type 2 diabetes.

Ms. Barrett pushes her thesis too far at times, but her plain-spoken disquisition makes a strong case that supernormal stimuli "can help us understand the problems of modern civilization."

One might even argue that supernormal stimuli—or perhaps our reactions to them—are the biggest problems faced by affluent societies.

In the case of hyperpartisanship and hypermoralism, our evolved moral senses, which allow human beings to cooperate, are now subject to the stimulus which is the 24 hour news cycle and the non-stop political campaign. Moral emotions are powerful forces, which are now activated routinely, rather than rarely.

If anybody has ideas on how to escape this cycle, I would love to hear them. Humanizing and getting to know the opposition, along the lines of intergroup contact theory, is an idea. Perhaps moral emotions can be activated against hyperpartisanship itself, rather than against individual ideologies. Or maybe with greater understanding, we can all learn to recognize supernormal moral stimuli and give them less power in our lives. Ideas welcome and I'm open to operationalizing particularly promising ideas as studies to be run on yourmorals.org.

- Ravi Iyer

Comments (5) Trackbacks (0)
  1. Intergroup Contact Theory is great, but logistically a nightmare. And it seems like the reason it works is because it corrects, to a degree, the caricatures that people create of the people they view as members of the outgroup. What’s wrong with moral education, learning about value pluralism, learning about social psychology, etc.? Do these effects persist after awareness? Are they not dampened at all by awareness?

  2. I think moral education is a promising direction…and hopefully we can take some of the recent findings of moral psychology and integrate them into social psychology courses. The trick, I think, is to find a way to do it that isn’t perceived as brainwashing kids to be either liberal or conservative. Indeed, value pluralism itself may generally correlate with conservativism.

  3. But a good moral education wouldn’t have to advocate value pluralism, only help people realize that it motivates many people. As a hobby I’ve always wanted to create a basic moral education course, and even registered a domain anonymously so that I could anonymously post it some day. It is deeply upsetting to me that all of the things I’ve been able to find on the topic have been commercial and have focused on indoctrinating values rather than cultivating moral wisdom. Do you have any suggestions about where to look? What do you think the most important parts of a moral education would be? What do you think the biggest pitfalls would be?

  4. Personally, I think an experiential aspect to a moral education would be essential. When I teach about morality, I often use the Haidt’s Brother-Sister incest dilemma and Greene’s trolley problems as ways to show moral irrationality at an experiential level as people feel the discomfort. Jon Haidt’s book has some good resources too: http://www.happinesshypothesis.com/beyond-teaching.html and Jonathan Glover’s book: Humanity, A Moral History is an interesting book too. I think anything that challenges existing beliefs (e.g. helping liberals understand conservatives and vice versa) is helpful and framing things as challenges to existing beliefs might make it seem more value neutral. Please keep me posted on your efforts as I’m quite interested in where they lead.

  5. I’d love to keep you posted, but like I said, I want for it to be anonymous and while it isn’t posted you know my e-mail address (which is not a pseudonym) and so it wouldn’t be anonymous if I told you. But thank you very much for pointing-out those resources. While I have of course read The Happiness Hypothesis I haven’t read Humanity: A Moral History of the Twentieth Century and will order it ASAP. :)


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