Psychologists Off the Clock

453. The Power of Guilt with Chris Moore

Mar 31, 2026
Chris Moore, developmental psychologist and author of The Power of Guilt, explores how guilt signals that a valued relationship may be harmed. He recounts a life-changing accident, traces guilt from childhood to caregiving, and discusses apology, forgiveness, manipulation, restorative justice, and collective responsibility. Brief, thought-provoking takes on why guilt matters in shaping repair and connection.
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INSIGHT

Why Psychopathy Reduces Guilt

  • Guilt relies on empathy, anxiety about the relationship, and self-directed anger; deficits produce low guilt as in psychopathy.
  • Psychopaths lack empathy and relational concern, so they feel little to no guilt despite social skill or rule-following.
INSIGHT

Personality And Gender Shape Guilt Proneness

  • Individual differences predict guilt proneness: high agreeableness and being female correlate with more frequent guilt.
  • Moore links women's greater relational labor to higher guilt rates, and personality traits shape how often people feel guilty.
INSIGHT

Care Roles Naturally Produce Heavy Guilt

  • Caregiving roles create potent guilt because responsibility plus vulnerability of the cared-for person elevates perceived risk of harm.
  • Parenthood and elder caregiving pair high responsibility with another's vulnerability, producing persistent parental and caregiver guilt.
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