Document
... be placed on one of these accounts as the basic rationale to justify ending something’s existence, as Giubilini and Minerva have done with their application of the psychological account of personhood. However, their choice of a particular metaphysical account of personhood need not, in one sense, c ...
... be placed on one of these accounts as the basic rationale to justify ending something’s existence, as Giubilini and Minerva have done with their application of the psychological account of personhood. However, their choice of a particular metaphysical account of personhood need not, in one sense, c ...
ethics session 3 personal and situational influences
... different values, etc. and this will inevitably lead to variations in ethical decision-making across nations, religions and cultures • Hofstede (1980; 1994) influential in shaping our understanding of these differences – our ‘mental programming’: ...
... different values, etc. and this will inevitably lead to variations in ethical decision-making across nations, religions and cultures • Hofstede (1980; 1994) influential in shaping our understanding of these differences – our ‘mental programming’: ...
m5zn_ed8434aebc6cfba
... Aristotle argued that morality is tied to the function of a human being. This should not be confused with any idea that meals or teeth are directly linked to the ethical use of language or the moral domain of human life. ...
... Aristotle argued that morality is tied to the function of a human being. This should not be confused with any idea that meals or teeth are directly linked to the ethical use of language or the moral domain of human life. ...
Moral reputation: An evolutionary and cognitive perspective
... too. Moreover, for moral emotions to signal trustworthiness, as argued by Trivers and Frank, they must be based on effective recognition and appropriate evaluation of actions that make one a trustworthy or on the contrary an untrustworthy partner in cooperation. In such an evolutionary perspective, ...
... too. Moreover, for moral emotions to signal trustworthiness, as argued by Trivers and Frank, they must be based on effective recognition and appropriate evaluation of actions that make one a trustworthy or on the contrary an untrustworthy partner in cooperation. In such an evolutionary perspective, ...
Does the Defining Issues Test Measure Ethical Judgment Ability or
... Thoma, 1999, p. 54), in which they centrally value the ideals of society, as expressed in laws, professional rules, and conventions. The highest Kohlbergian stage, however, is Postconventional, or Principled, reasoning, in which a person has internalized principles of justice or behavior that supers ...
... Thoma, 1999, p. 54), in which they centrally value the ideals of society, as expressed in laws, professional rules, and conventions. The highest Kohlbergian stage, however, is Postconventional, or Principled, reasoning, in which a person has internalized principles of justice or behavior that supers ...
Restoring the moral dimension in social scientific accounts: a
... science that has occurred over the last two centuries has been accompanied by an expulsion of reason from values, and the rise of the view that values can only be subjective, not objective. More recently, post-structuralists have adopted what Habermas has termed 'cryptonormative' stances, both aboli ...
... science that has occurred over the last two centuries has been accompanied by an expulsion of reason from values, and the rise of the view that values can only be subjective, not objective. More recently, post-structuralists have adopted what Habermas has termed 'cryptonormative' stances, both aboli ...
Haidt, “The Righteous Mind”
... that compel men to support their own children? Well, now that I was no longer on the defensive, I could see that those arguments made sense, even if there are also many good effects of liberating women from dependence on men. … If you grow up in a WEIRD society, you become so well educated in the et ...
... that compel men to support their own children? Well, now that I was no longer on the defensive, I could see that those arguments made sense, even if there are also many good effects of liberating women from dependence on men. … If you grow up in a WEIRD society, you become so well educated in the et ...
koleva.graham.submit.. - Faculty Web Sites at the University of Virginia
... Imagine two Americans, Libby and Connie. Libby believes abortion should be legal and supports tight restrictions on gun purchases, while Connie believes that the sanctity of fetal life mandates the criminal prosecution of abortion doctors and believes that any restrictions on gun purchases violate t ...
... Imagine two Americans, Libby and Connie. Libby believes abortion should be legal and supports tight restrictions on gun purchases, while Connie believes that the sanctity of fetal life mandates the criminal prosecution of abortion doctors and believes that any restrictions on gun purchases violate t ...
how to understand organizations under j. etkin perspective
... Following this explanation, some immediate questions surfaced ¿how had Bush also gain and loose acceptance in American society?, and ¿why citizens expiates their faults by that?, or at least their responsibility. The same example may be observed in all regimes and societies, from early mentioned Uni ...
... Following this explanation, some immediate questions surfaced ¿how had Bush also gain and loose acceptance in American society?, and ¿why citizens expiates their faults by that?, or at least their responsibility. The same example may be observed in all regimes and societies, from early mentioned Uni ...
this PDF - HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
... living sanely in ethical attentiveness to the other—all are characteristic examples of this carefully normative mode of writing, as is her warning against making the “mistake” of seeing our relation to state, party, or religious authorities as answers to “our true need.” These are points of consider ...
... living sanely in ethical attentiveness to the other—all are characteristic examples of this carefully normative mode of writing, as is her warning against making the “mistake” of seeing our relation to state, party, or religious authorities as answers to “our true need.” These are points of consider ...
Corporate social responsibility
... Hire people who are like them Think they are immune to conflicts of interest Take more credit than they deserve Blame others when they deserve some blame themselves ...
... Hire people who are like them Think they are immune to conflicts of interest Take more credit than they deserve Blame others when they deserve some blame themselves ...
Creative moral imagination
... aspects of the mind which tend to minimize the vast tacit knowledge of and behavioral control by the rest of the brain. When a person relies on intellect alone, it signals that the intuitive mind and emotional intelligence are underutilized or underdeveloped (Narvaez, forthcoming). In contrast to a ...
... aspects of the mind which tend to minimize the vast tacit knowledge of and behavioral control by the rest of the brain. When a person relies on intellect alone, it signals that the intuitive mind and emotional intelligence are underutilized or underdeveloped (Narvaez, forthcoming). In contrast to a ...
Divine Command Moral Ontology - SPARK: Scholarship at Parkland
... believes that there are no objective moral values and duties, even the self-professing relativists. Michael Ruse, who was quoted earlier as arguing that morality is illusory in light of naturalistic evolution, nevertheless in another writing admits, “The man who says that it is morally acceptable to ...
... believes that there are no objective moral values and duties, even the self-professing relativists. Michael Ruse, who was quoted earlier as arguing that morality is illusory in light of naturalistic evolution, nevertheless in another writing admits, “The man who says that it is morally acceptable to ...
Facing moral dilemmas - The Future Leadership Initiative TFLI
... The characteristics of the moral dilemma also affects unethical choices. More specifically, the moral intensity (Jones, 1991) of the issue reduces the incidence of unethical choices. When you – for instance - expect the harm following your decision to skip a safety guideline to be large, chances you ...
... The characteristics of the moral dilemma also affects unethical choices. More specifically, the moral intensity (Jones, 1991) of the issue reduces the incidence of unethical choices. When you – for instance - expect the harm following your decision to skip a safety guideline to be large, chances you ...
imageREAL Capture
... discourse - especially, but by no means solely, in the international law arena. The criticisms that have been made of utilitarianism over the centuries number into (probably) the hundreds. All other moral theories have also been subject to intense criticisms. This paper does not seek to add to the e ...
... discourse - especially, but by no means solely, in the international law arena. The criticisms that have been made of utilitarianism over the centuries number into (probably) the hundreds. All other moral theories have also been subject to intense criticisms. This paper does not seek to add to the e ...
Developmental Psychology Paper II
... working with children, Piaget finally realised what he wanted to investigate – children’s development! He noticed that children of a younger aged answered questions qualitatively different than those of an older age. This suggested to him that younger children were not less knowledgeable, but gave d ...
... working with children, Piaget finally realised what he wanted to investigate – children’s development! He noticed that children of a younger aged answered questions qualitatively different than those of an older age. This suggested to him that younger children were not less knowledgeable, but gave d ...
D:\arch\arch 1988-1994\my papers from 1992-1994\haidt.1992.
... is not a product of Western values per se, but that middle-class culture in general and democratic culture in particular encourage post-conventionality by providing greater opportunities for role-taking, and less authoritarian discipline practices. As a result of his cross-cultural work, Kohlberg (1 ...
... is not a product of Western values per se, but that middle-class culture in general and democratic culture in particular encourage post-conventionality by providing greater opportunities for role-taking, and less authoritarian discipline practices. As a result of his cross-cultural work, Kohlberg (1 ...
Adam Smith and the Stages of Moral Development
... generate critical points on both matters of detail and larger implications. By a “stage theory of moral development,” I mean a theory that: (1) identifies distinct and empirically confirmed forms of moral agency (“stages”) based on psychological operations; (2) claims these stages are universal, gro ...
... generate critical points on both matters of detail and larger implications. By a “stage theory of moral development,” I mean a theory that: (1) identifies distinct and empirically confirmed forms of moral agency (“stages”) based on psychological operations; (2) claims these stages are universal, gro ...
Chapter 2
... • Cognitive development refers to the thought process followed in one’s moral development • An individual’s ability to make reasoned judgments about moral matters develops in stages • These stages characterize the way people think about ethical dilemmas ...
... • Cognitive development refers to the thought process followed in one’s moral development • An individual’s ability to make reasoned judgments about moral matters develops in stages • These stages characterize the way people think about ethical dilemmas ...
What Does Respect for Nature Mean?
... ... make decisions on the basis of those reasons ... exercise the necessary resolve and willpower to carry out those decisions ... hold [it] self answerable to others for failing to carry them out. (14) Taylor's definition is in fact only of an agent. A moral agent not only must have the capacities ...
... ... make decisions on the basis of those reasons ... exercise the necessary resolve and willpower to carry out those decisions ... hold [it] self answerable to others for failing to carry them out. (14) Taylor's definition is in fact only of an agent. A moral agent not only must have the capacities ...
Chapter 3 - Peru State College
... argues that Kohlberg’s theory of moral development does not adequately reflect relationships and concern for others. – A justice perspective is a moral perspective that focuses on the rights of the individual. – A care perspective views people in terms of their connectedness with others and emphasiz ...
... argues that Kohlberg’s theory of moral development does not adequately reflect relationships and concern for others. – A justice perspective is a moral perspective that focuses on the rights of the individual. – A care perspective views people in terms of their connectedness with others and emphasiz ...
Temperament - Wayne Community College
... • Moral development – process by which human beings learn to monitor their own actions – deciding whether a tempting behavior is appropriate or inappropriate ...
... • Moral development – process by which human beings learn to monitor their own actions – deciding whether a tempting behavior is appropriate or inappropriate ...
Key words: Film, Moral Value, 3 idiots
... populations that were focus on related to intrinsic value and conclude the moral. The data were collected by downloading the movie script from internet, and the data were analyzed by reading, identifying, classifying, analyzing, and interpreting moral value based on Pojman’s theory and intrinsic val ...
... populations that were focus on related to intrinsic value and conclude the moral. The data were collected by downloading the movie script from internet, and the data were analyzed by reading, identifying, classifying, analyzing, and interpreting moral value based on Pojman’s theory and intrinsic val ...
Freedom of the Will and Stubborn Moralism
... behavior of the robot neighbor would, of course, be incompatible with this requirement—it is simply a fact that the robot lacks the ability to do anything other than what he was programmed to do. Some have questioned this conclusion, arguing that even if human beings are not free in this ultimate se ...
... behavior of the robot neighbor would, of course, be incompatible with this requirement—it is simply a fact that the robot lacks the ability to do anything other than what he was programmed to do. Some have questioned this conclusion, arguing that even if human beings are not free in this ultimate se ...
When Maxims Clash: Categorical Imperative and
... worth, it seems to approve more maxims than one can act upon should a conflict arise between them. Since the categorical imperative alone is incapable of helping one make a decision when clashing maxims result in a deadlock, I argue that people must rely on what Kant discarded in the process of deri ...
... worth, it seems to approve more maxims than one can act upon should a conflict arise between them. Since the categorical imperative alone is incapable of helping one make a decision when clashing maxims result in a deadlock, I argue that people must rely on what Kant discarded in the process of deri ...