4.3 Article

Self-Serving Dishonesty Partially Substitutes Fairness in Motivating Cooperation When People Are Treated Fairly

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19106326

Keywords

fairness; cooperation; honesty; the prisoner's dilemma; die-rolling task

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31972906]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing [cstc2020jcyj-msxmX0215]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [SWU2209235]
  4. Research Innovation Project of Graduate Student in Chongqing [CYS20091]

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Fairness is crucial for social interactions, as its violation can lead to non-cooperation and dishonesty. This study explores how fair or unfair treatment affects cooperation and honesty, and how dishonesty weakens the impact of fairness on cooperation.
Fairness is a key expectation in social interactions. Its violation leads to adverse reactions, including non-cooperation and dishonesty. The present study aimed to examine how (1) fair (unfair) treatment may drive cooperation (defection) and honesty (self-serving dishonesty), (2) dishonesty primes further moral disengagement and reduced cooperation, and (3) dishonesty weakens (substitutes) the effect of fairness on cooperation. The prisoner's dilemma (Experiment 1 and 2) and die-rolling task (Experiment 2) were employed for capturing cooperation and dishonest behaviors, respectively. To manipulate perceived unfairness, participants were randomly assigned to play the prisoner's dilemma game, where players either choose more cooperation (fair condition) or defection (unfair condition). Results of Experiment 1 (n = 102) suggested that participants perceive higher unfairness and behave less cooperatively when the other player primarily chooses defection. Results of Exp. 2 (n = 240) (a) confirmed Exp. 1 results, (b) showed that players in the unfair condition also show more self-serving dishonest behavior, and (c) that dishonest behavior weakens the effect of fairness on cooperation. Together, these results extended previous work by highlighting the self-serving lies when the opponent is fair trigger higher cooperation, presumably as a means to alleviate self-reflective moral emotions or restore justice.

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