Kohlberg HW
Kohlberg HW
Kohlberg HW
Summary: The concern is for self - "Will I get into trouble for doing (or not doing) it?" Good behavior is associated
with avoiding punishment.
Summary: The concern is "What's in it for me?" Still egocentric in outlook but with a growing ability to see things from
another person's perspective. Action is judged right if it helps in satisfying one's needs or involves a fair exchange.
Summary: The concern is "What will people think of me?" and the desire is for group approval. Right action is one
that would please or impress others. This often involves self-sacrifice but it provides the psychological pleasure of
'approval of others.' Actions are also judged in relation to their intention.
Summary: The concern now goes beyond one's immediate group(s) to the larger society ... to the maintenance of law
and order. One's obligation to the law overrides one's obligations of loyalty to one's family, friends and groups. To put
it simply, no one or group is above the law.
Summary: The concern is social utility or public interest. While rules are needed to maintain social order, they should
not be blindly obeyed but should be set up (even changed) by social contract for the greater good of society. Right
action is one that protects the rights of the individual according to rules agreed upon by the whole society.
Explanatory Notes:
The Golden Rule: "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you."
The Categorical Imperative: "Act so as to treat any rational being as an end-in-himself and never merely
as a means." In other words, a moral law that is unconditional or absolute and which does not depend on
any ulterior motive or end. Compare "You shall not steal" with "Do not steal if you want respect in the
community." The former is an end-in-itself ... a categorical imperative.
Summary: The concern is for moral principles ... an action is judged right if it is consistent with self-chosen ethical
principles. These principles are not concrete moral rules but are universal principles of justice, reciprocity, equality
and human dignity.
Possible Stage 6 response to Heinz Dilemma: Heinz should steal the drug to save his wife because preserving
human life is a higher moral obligation than preserving property.
Criticisms of Kohlberg
Kohlberg's theory has provoked a good deal of criticism. Not everyone, first of all, is enthusiastic about the concept of a
postconventional morality. Hogan (1973, 1975), for example, feels that it is dangerous for people to place their own
principles above society and the law. It may be that many psychologists react to Kohlberg in a similar way, and that this
reaction underlies many of the debates over the scientific merits of his research.
Others have argued that Kohlberg's stages are culturally biased. Simpson (1974), for example, says that Kohlberg has
developed a stage model based on the Western philosophical tradition and has then applied this model to non-Western
cultures without considering the extent to which they have different moral outlooks.
Another criticism is that Kohlberg's theory is sex-biased, a view that has been thoughtfully expressed by one of
Kohlberg's associates and co-authors, Carol Gilligan (1982). Gilligan observes that Kohlberg's stages were derived
exclusively from interviews with males, and she charges that the stages reflect a decidedly male orientation. For males,
advanced moral thought revolves around rules, rights, and abstract principles. The ideal is formal justice, in which all
parties evaluate one another's claims in an impartial manner. This conception of morality, Gilligan argues, fails to capture
the distinctly female voice on moral matters.
For women, Gilligan says, morality centers not on rights and rules but on interpersonal relationships and the ethics of
compassion and care. The ideal is not impersonal justice but more affiliative ways of living. Women's morality, in
addition, is more contextualized, it is tied to real, ongoing relationships rather than abstract solutions to hypothetical
dilemmas.
Because of these sex differences, Gilligan says, men and women frequently score at different stages on Kohlberg's scale.
Women typically score at stage 3, with its focus on interpersonal feelings, whereas men more commonly score at stages 4
and 5, which reflect more abstract conceptions of social organization. Thus, women score lower than men. If, however,
Kohlberg's scale were more sensitive to women's distinctly interpersonal orientations, it would show that women also
continue to develop their thinking beyond stage 3.
1. Scenario 1
A woman was near death from a unique kind of cancer. There is a drug that might save her. The drug
costs $4,000 per dosage. The sick woman's husband, Heinz, went to everyone he knew to borrow the
money and tried every legal means, but he could only get together about $2,000. He asked the doctor
scientist who discovered the drug for a discount or let him pay later. But the doctor scientist refused.
Should Heinz break into the laboratory to steal the drug for his wife? Why or why not?
2. Scenario 2
Heinz broke into the laboratory and stole the drug. The next day, the newspapers reported the break-in
and theft. Brown, a police officer and a friend of Heinz remembered seeing Heinz last evening, behaving
suspiciously near the laboratory. Later that night, he saw Heinz running away from the laboratory.
3. Scenario 3
Officer Brown reported what he saw. Heinz was arrested and brought to court. If convicted, he faces up to
two years' jail. Heinz was found guilty.
Stage 1:
Punishment-
Obedience
Orientation
Level One:
Pre-conventional
Morality
Stage 2:
Instrumental
Relativist
Orientation
Stage 3: Good
Boy-Nice Girl
Orientation
Level Two:
Conventional
Morality
Stage 5: Social
Contract
Orientation
Level Three:
Post-
Conventional
Morality
Stage 6: Universal
Ethical Principle
Orientation