Accounting for Evil and Cruelty: Is to Explain to Condone?
- 1 August 1999
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Personality and Social Psychology Review
- Vol. 3 (3) , 254-268
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327957pspr0303_8
Abstract
Analysts of evil and violence express the concern that to explain harmdoing may result in a condoning attitude toward perpetrators. An examination of research relevant to this hypothesis suggests that there are a variety of cognitive and affective processes that may produce a relatively condoning attitude toward perpetrators as a result of explaining their actions. Evidence from 3 exploratory studies supported the exonerating effects of explanations. Participants generating explicit explanations of harmdoing displayed a more condoning attitude toward perpetrators than did those forming impressions of perpetrators without first explaining the acts. Participants reading social-psychological explanations of harmdoing also judged the researcher to be more condoning of perpetrators than those reading dispositional explanations of the same behavior. Implications of these findings are discussed.Keywords
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