Quote from xflat2186:
Price swings in the underlying have an effect on the implied volatility which in turn effects the price of the options. That implied volatility effects the options prices on a curve. In a vacuum that curve would be bell shaped with the at the money being at the peak. Since implied volatility rises as the market falls and vice versa there is a skew such that the out of the money downside strikes trade at higher volatilities then the out of the money upside strikes. ALL CALLS AND PUTS IN THE SAME STRIKE SAME MONTH TRADE AT PARITY TO EACHOTHER AND ARE PRICED THE SAME IN RELATIVE TERMS.
That is all true and a good explanation. There are many explanations for the skew in the S&P500, but the one you cite is the best and makes the most sense IMHO.
I would add only that "in a vacuum," the probability distribution is lognormal, not normal, so that bell-shaped curve is off-center. In other words, if all strikes traded at the same implied volatility, the out-of-the-money put would be cheaper than the equally out-of-the-money call. If the S&P is at 1400, the 1350 put would be cheaper than the 1450 call if both traded at the same implied volatility.