This paper examines how moral reasoning can become reoriented under emotional and normative pressure, producing post hoc justifications that prioritize desirable outcomes over reflective engagement with values. Using a conceptual and interpretive approach, the study draws on Jackendoff’s value system as a framework for understanding how agents assign, prioritize, and act upon values in morally complex situations. In Jackendoff’s model, values can function as input rules, guiding action selection, and as output rules, translating value judgments into practical directives. The originality of this work lies in applying the value system to ethically pressured contexts, revealing a distinctive reversal: actions are retrospectively justified based on outcomes, so that input rules (values assigned to outcomes) are treated as if they validate antecedent actions, while output rules take on the role of prior guidance. This inversion highlights a structural pattern in which moral reasoning appears coherent but becomes ethically shallow, relying on outcome-based reassurance rather than deliberation over competing values. The paper illustrates this pattern through a fictional but plausible dilemma, showing how emotional stakes and relational dependencies shape the orientation of justification. Supplementary perspectives from philosophical psychology, appraisal theories of emotion, and Bateson’s Double Bind Theory clarify how affective tension and conflicting imperatives contribute to this reasoning structure. By situating the analysis within philosophical debates on moral luck, outcome sensitivity, and moral hindsight, the paper emphasizes that the framework is conceptual rather than empirical. The study provides a novel lens for understanding how morally pressured agents may generate internally coherent, outcome-driven justifications, offering insight into the dynamics of moral reasoning under emotional and normative constraints.
Regina Christiansen (Fri,) studied this question.