Full metadata
Inspired by John Rawls and his life's work Justice as Fairness, I sought to measure how much political empathy a person has and then compare this to decision-making styles in search of any relation between the two. Political empathy is a term to refer to one's willingness to utilize governmental policy to help those who are the neediest because of the understanding that humans deserve equal treatment since no one is more human than anyone else. Because of current research I found that I can test political empathy because of empathy’s correlation with political ideology; specifically, that those who are more liberal have more empathy. I test participant’s ideology in a normal setting and then present them with the concept of Rawls’ Original Position to see if they shift more one way when presented with this idea which is supposed to make them think more empathetically.<br/>I have two hypothesis that I cover: first, that more people will shift in a more liberal direction between the two tests, and second, that those who have more political empathy make political decisions based more on emotion rather than facts and reason. I tested decision-making through a myriad of tests within a focus group so I could get multiple angles at the issue. My first hypothesis was proven incorrect and while I didn’t have enough participants in my focus groups to make a clear determination, it didn’t look like there was any correlation between political ideology and decision-making styles.
- Willes, Hannah Elizabeth (Author)
- Lennon, Tara (Thesis director)
- Simhony, Avital (Committee member)
- Historical, Philosophical & Religious Studies (Contributor)
- School of Politics and Global Studies (Contributor)
- Historical, Philosophical & Religious Studies, Sch (Contributor)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- 2021-04-17 12:38:06
- 2021-08-11 04:09:57
- 3 years 3 months ago