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Philosophers are studying Reddit’s “Am I the Asshole?”
In which philosophy tries to understand how normal people think about morality.
Philosophers, bless them, are trying to understand how normal people think about morality.
Normal people, as you may have heard, hang out on the internet. And what is the internetâs biggest trove of everyday moral dilemmas? Why, itâs Redditâs âAm I the Asshole?â forum!
So, why not comb through millions of comments there to find out how people make moral decisions?
This might sound like a joke, but itâs actually been the past four years of Daniel Yudkinâs life. As he was doing a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania, Yudkin thought about how moral psychology and moral philosophy â his fields of research â mostly focus on hypothetical, contextless scenarios involving strangers.
For example, the famous âtrolley problemâ asks if you should actively choose to divert a runaway trolley so that it kills one person if, by doing so, you can save five people along a different track from getting killed.
Thatâs a pretty weird way to study moral decision-making. In real life, the trade-offs we face often involve people we actually know, but the trolley problem imagines a world where you have no special relationship to anybody. It doesnât ask whether you should make a different decision if one of the people tied to the tracks is, say, your mother.
Yudkin, now a visiting scholar at Penn, hypothesized that this style of investigating morality overlooks an important aspect of real life: the relational context.
And Yudkin worried about that omission. Philosophy doesnât only matter for the ivory tower â it can shape how we set up our societies. âIf weâre living in a society that omits the importance of relational obligations,â he told me, âââthereâs a risk that we see ourselves as atomic individuals and we arenât focused enough on what we owe each other.â
So, together with a group of co-authors on a recent preprint paper, he set about studying the popular subreddit where people describe how they acted in a moral conflict â whether with a spouse, a roommate, a boss, or someone else â and then ask that all-important question: Am I the asshole?
What studying morality on Reddit reveals
Yudkin and his co-authors scraped roughly 369,000 posts and 11 million comments written between 2018 and 2021 on âAm I the Asshole?â (AITA for short). Then they used AI to sort the dilemmas into several categories. Those include procedural fairness (like âAITA for skipping the line?â), honesty ( âAITA for saying I donât speak English in awkward situations?â), and relational obligations ( âAITA for expecting my girlfriend to lint roll my jacket?â).
The researchers found that the most common dilemmas had to do with relational obligations: dilemmas about what we owe to others.
Next, they wanted to find out whether certain types of dilemmas were more likely to pop up in certain types of relationships. Will some dilemmas arise more often with your sister, say, than with your manager?
So the researchers examined how often each dilemma popped up in 38 different relationships. Surprise, surprise: The likelihood of encountering different dilemmas, they found, does depend on whom youâre dealing with. If youâre hanging out with your sister, youâre more likely to be worrying about relational obligations, while interactions with your manager are more likely to get you thinking about procedural fairness.
The truth is, you donât need a fancy study to tell you this. If youâve ever had a sister or a manager â or if youâve ever had the experience of being, you know, a human â you probably already know this in your bones.
Itâs probably obvious to most of us that relational context is super important when it comes to judging the morality of actions. Itâs common to think we have different moral obligations to different categories of people â to your sister versus to your manager versus to a total stranger.
So what does it say about modern philosophy that itâs largely ignored relational context?
Uncovering philosophyâs blind spots
Letâs get a bit more precise: Itâs not as though all of philosophy has ignored relational context. But one branch â utilitarianism â is strongly inclined in this direction. Utilitarians believe we should seek the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people â and we have to consider everybodyâs happiness equally. So weâre not supposed to be partial to our own friends or family members.
This ethical approach took off in the 18th century. Today, itâs extremely influential in Western philosophy â and not just in the halls of academia. Famous philosophers like Peter Singer have popularized it in the public sphere, too.
Increasingly, though, some are challenging it.
âMoral philosophy has for so long been about trying to identify universal moral principles that apply to all people regardless of their identity,â Yudkin told me. âAnd itâs because of this effort that moral philosophers have really moved away from the relational perspective. But the more that I think about the data, the more clear to me it is that youâre losing something essential from the moral equation when you abstract away from relationships.â
Moral psychologists like Princetonâs Molly Crockett and Yaleâs Margaret Clark have likewise been investigating the idea that moral obligations are relationship-specific.
âHereâs a classic example,â Crockett told me a few years ago. âConsider a woman, Wendy, who could easily provide a meal to a young child but fails to do so. Has Wendy done anything wrong? It depends on who the child is. If sheâs failing to provide a meal to her own child, then absolutely sheâs done something wrong! But if Wendy is a restaurant owner and the child is not otherwise starving, then they donât have a relationship that creates special obligations prompting her to feed the child.â
According to Crockett, being a moral agent has become trickier for us with the rise of globalization, which forces us to think about how our actions might affect people weâre never going to meet. âBeing a good global citizen now butts up against our very powerful psychological tendencies to prioritize our families and friends,â Crockett told me.
Utilitarians would say that we should overcome those powerful psychological tendencies, but many others would beg to differ. Philosopher Patricia Churchland once told me that utilitarianism is unrealistic because âthereâs no special consideration for your own children, family, friends. Biologically, thatâs just ridiculous. People canât live that way.â
But just because our brains may incline us to care for some more than others doesnât necessarily mean we ought to bow to that, does it?
âNo, it doesnât,â Churchland said, âbut you would have a hard time arguing for the morality of abandoning your own two children in order to save 20 orphans. Even [Immanuel] Kant thought that âoughtâ implies âcan,â and I canât abandon my children for the sake of orphans on the other side of the planet whom I donât know, just because thereâs 20 of them and only two of mine. Itâs not psychologically feasible.â
If you ask me, thatâs fair enough. While Iâd respect the decision of those who choose to save the 20 orphans, I certainly wouldnât fault someone for acting in line with an impulse that is hardwired into them.
So ... am I the asshole?