Morality Theorists PDF
Morality Theorists PDF
Morality Theorists PDF
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Table 7.1
Brief Examples of Some Possible Responses to Kohlbergs
Heinz Dilemma for Each Stage
Level Stage
Responses________________________________
1: Pro
Heinz should steal the drug: He could get in trouble with his
wife and family otherwise.
1: Con
2: Pro
Heinz should steal the drug: He will be happy when his wife
is cured she can again be there for him.
2: Con
II
3: Pro
Heinz should steal the drug: Heinzs wife and family will
recognize that he did the right thing by them.
II
3: Con
Heinz should not steal the drug: People will think him a
thief.
II
4: Pro
Heinz should steal the drug: He must do whats right for his
wife, but he must also accept his punishment.
II
4: Con
III
5: Pro
Heinz should steal the drug: His wifes need outweighs the
druggists. The law should be lenient with him, or even
changed.
III
5: Con
III
6: Pro
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Although less than 50% think that having sex before marriage
is acceptable, 62% state that they believe that young people
are responsible enough to be sexually active (p. 156).
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In doing so, Jake tried to weigh the value of a life and contrasts
this with the money the druggist would make from the sale.
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Gilligan was careful to make the point that Amy and Jake do
not fit stereotypical girl-boy molds either: Amy wanted to be a
scientist, Jake an English teacher.
What the Research Shows
Common sense or everyday experience might suggest that
there really are differences in the ways men and boys as compared
to women and girls approach morality with regard to their relative
weightings of justice versus care. But so-called common sense and
ordinary experience can also lead to misperceptions and
stereotyping. So the real question is: what does the actual research
show?
The picture here is not exactly crystal clear; it is mixed, and the
hypothesis that gender differences in moral understanding remains
questionable, with some studies suggesting that such gender
differences do exist; but most studies do not, and support for
Gilligans thesis to date is weak at best (Jafee & Hyde, 2000;
Turiel, 2006).
Gilligan effectively used individual case studies (such as those
of Amy and Jake) to buttress her arguments, along with a
smattering of cultural common sense beliefs about the relative
roles of women and men along with limited empirical data. But
further studies have, on the whole, failed to confirm her ideas.
Still, Gilligans notions of the morality of care versus the
morality of justice may retain their cogency, and perhaps they do
suggest that Kohlberg may have overlooked an important source of
moral reasoning by neglecting the ethos of care; or at least by
giving it less weight than justice in his hierarchy.
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Perhaps the real truth is that some boys and men do embrace a
morality of care and concern; and likewise, some women and girls
are more logical and less sociable in their worldviews. Is one point
of view concerning moral judgments more advanced or civilized
than the other? Are there two separate tracts or dimensions to
moral reasoning? These are indeed questions worth pondering, as
well as hypotheses for further research.
On Inculcating Morality:
Whats a Parent to Do?
Building character in children seems a worthy goal. Research
identifying three styles of parenting (Eisenberg, Fabes, & Spinrad,
2006; Hoffman & Saltzstein, 1967; Maccoby & Martin, 1983;
Turiel, 2006) shows these to include (a) assertion of power, using
mainly punishment, (b) disapproval and withdrawal of affection,
and (c) what researchers call induction. The latter consists of a
reasoned approach with children in which parents facilitate their
understanding of morality by careful explanation, including pleas
for the concern for the well-being of others. Of these three,
induction has been shown consistently to be the most successful
method for disciplining children. This finding seems consistent
with Kohlbergs view of the child as moral philosopher; the child
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Notes
1. Kohlberg (1970, pp. 57-58), cited in Turiel (1998, p. 866).
2. I worry about the dangers of stereotyping cultures as much as I
do about the individuals from those different cultures. As an
example, labeling both Japan and Bolivia as collectivist
cultures may make them seem very similar when in fact they
are otherwise quite diverse. Though both may be contrasted to
the U.S. on at least this one dimension, the broader view is that
peoples differ, even within a given society or culture, and the
world itself is not static but constantly changing.
3. See Eisenberg, Fabes, and Spinrad (2006) for an extended
treatment of the development of prosocial (or altruistic)
behavior.
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