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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251104T120000
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DTSTAMP:20260618T230645
CREATED:20251008T215101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251008T215101Z
UID:2456-1762257600-1762261200@iis.memphis.edu
SUMMARY:The Moralization of Health (Somogy Varga)
DESCRIPTION:Moral judg­ments are known to influ­ence seem­ing­ly descrip­tive assess­ments. Var­ga and col­leagues show that indi­vid­u­als per­ceived as moral­ly bad are more like­ly to be judged as unhealthy and dis­eased\, a phe­nom­e­non termed “the pathol­o­giza­tion effect”. Across three vignette-based exper­i­ments\, we iden­ti­fy a com­ple­men­tary pat­tern: the “reverse pathol­o­giza­tion effect”: par­tic­i­pants were more like­ly to attribute bad actions and char­ac­ter to indi­vid­u­als described as hav­ing a dis­or­der than to those described as healthy\, and more like­ly to attribute good actions and char­ac­ter to indi­vid­u­als described as mak­ing a mirac­u­lous recov­ery than to those who remained ill.
URL:https://iis.memphis.edu/event/the-moralization-of-health-somogy-varga/
LOCATION:Institute for Intelligent Systems ERIC 306\, 3830 Norriswood Avenue\, Memphis\, TN\, 38152\, United States
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