Definition
Moral Nausea
noun · ethics & affect / psychological
Moral Nausea describes the visceral discomfort that arises when ethical boundaries are repeatedly violated without consequence.
Examples in use
“I feel sick watching this.”
“Nothing surprises me anymore, but my body reacts.”
“That wasn’t outrage. It was Moral Nausea.”
The stomach turned before the mind could argue.
Rating on the term
An individual or system rates high in Moral Nausea when:
- ethical breaches provoke physical revulsion rather than debate
- repetition dulls shock but not discomfort
- withdrawal replaces engagement to preserve stability
Lower expression appears when accountability restores moral coherence.
Deep Dive
Moral Nausea is a regulatory signal, not a failure of resilience. The body reacts where language has been exhausted.
It commonly emerges under conditions of Dystopian Acceptance, when harm is reframed as normal or necessary.
Prolonged Moral Nausea often precedes disengagement, numbness, or Compliance Creep.
Variants
morally nauseated (adjective)
ethical revulsion (noun phrase)
Classification
Domain: Ethics & Affect
Archive: Departmental Linguistics – Qrious Vernacular
Defined by The Department of Qrious Threads.
Related word lens
ethics · culture · authority · regulation
