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Moral Judgment and Decision Making - Bartels, Daniel M. (EDT)/ Bauman, Christopher W. (EDT)/ Skitka, Linda J. (EDT)/ Medin, Douglas L. (EDT)/ Ross, Brian H. (EDT)

Moral Judgment And Decision Making

por Bartels, Daniel M. (edt) ; Bauman, Christopher W. (edt) ; Skitka, Linda J. (edt) ; Medin, Douglas L. (edt) ; Ross, Brian H. (edt)

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Formato: Tapa dura (Hardcover)
Editorial: Academic Pr
Tema: PSYCHOLOGY / Cognitive Psychology
Idioma: Inglés
Páginas: 371
Peso: 454 gramos
Estado: Nuevo
ISBN: 0123744881
ISBN 13: 9780123744883
Precio: US$ 189,29
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Resumen del libro
Publisher Summary 1

This volume presents a variety of perspectives from within and outside moral psychology.  Recently there has been an explosion of research in moral psychology, but it is one of the subfields most in need of bridge-building, both within and across areas.  Interests in moral phenomena have spawned several separate lines of research that appear to address similar concerns from a variety of perspectives.  The contributions to this volume examine key theoretical and empirical issues these perspectives share that connect these issues with the broader base of theory and research in social and cognitive psychology.

 

The first two chapters discuss the role of mental representation in moral judgment and reasoning.  Sloman, Fernbach, and Ewing argue that causal models are the canonical representational medium underlying moral reasoning, and Mikhail offers an account that makes use of linguistic structures and implicates legal concepts.  Bilz and Nadler follow with a discussion of the ways in which laws, which are typically construed in terms of affecting behavior, exert an influence on moral attitudes, cognition, and emotions.

 

Baron and Ritov follow with a discussion of how people's moral cognition is often driven by law-like rules that forbid actions and suggest that value-driven judgment is relatively less concerned by the consequences of those actions than some normative standards would prescribe.  Iliev et al. argue that moral cognition makes use of both rules and consequences, and review a number of laboratory studies that suggest that values influence what captures our attention, and that attention is a powerful determinant of judgment and preference.  Ginges follows with a discussion of how these value-related processes influence cognition and behavior outside the laboratory, in high-stakes, real-world conflicts.

 

Two subsequent chapters discuss further building blocks of moral cognition.  Lapsley and Narvaez discuss the development of moral characters in children, and Reyna and Casillas offer a memory-based account of moral reasoning, backed up by developmental evidence.  Their theoretical framework is also very relevant to the phenomena discussed in the Sloman et al., Baron and Ritov, and Iliev et al. chapters.

 

The final three chapters are centrally focused on the interplay of hot and cold cognition.  They examine the relationship between recent empirical findings in moral psychology and accounts that rely on concepts and distinctions borrowed from normative ethics and decision theory.  Connolly and Hardman focus on bridge-building between contemporary discussions in the judgment and decision making and moral judgment literatures, offering several useful methodological and theoretical critiques.  Ditto, Pizarro, and Tannenbaum argue that some forms of moral judgment that appear objective and absolute on the surface are, at bottom, more about motivated reasoning in service of some desired conclusion.  Finally, Bauman and Skitka argue that moral relevance is in the eye of the perceiver and emphasize an empirical approach to identifying whether people perceive a given judgment as moral or non-moral.  They describe a number of behavioral implications of people's reported perception that a judgment or choice is a moral one, and in doing so, they suggest that the way in which researchers carve out the moral domain a priori might be dubious.

 


Tabla de Contenidos del libro
Contributors ix
Preface xi
1. Causal Models: The Representational Infrastructure for Moral Judgment 1
Steven A. Sloman, Philip M. Fernbach, and Scott Ewing
1. Introduction
2
2. Causal Models
4
3. Architectural Considerations
7
4. Roles for Causal Models
9
4.1. Appraisal
9
4.2. Deliberation
10
5. Moral Principles That Draw on Causal Structure
11
5.1. Intention
12
5.2. Omission/Commission
13
5.3. Causal Proximity
16
5.4. Locus of Intervention
18
5.5. Fairness
19
5.6. Putting It All Together
20
6. Conclusions
22
References
23
2. Moral Grammar and Intuitive Jurisprudence: A Formal Model of Unconscious Moral and Legal Knowledge 27
John Mikhail
1. The Moral Grammar Hypothesis
29
2. The Problem of Descriptive Adequacy
31
2.1. Twelve Considered Judgments
31
2.2. The Poverty of the Perceptual Stimulus
37
2.3. Simplifying the Problem
40
3. Intuitive Legal Appraisal
45
3.1. Acts and Circumstances
45
3.2. K-Generation and I-Generation
49
4. Deontic Rules
51
4.1. The Principle of Natural Liberty
52
4.2. The Prohibition of Battery and Homicide
53
4.3. The Self-Preservation Principle
55
4.4. The Moral Calculus of Risk
56
4.5. The Rescue Principle
63
4.6. The Principle of Double Effect
67
5. A Periodic Table of Moral Elements
71
6. Conversion Rules
81
7. Conclusion
92
Acknowledgments
93
References
93
3. Law, Psychology, and Morality 101
Kenworthey Bilz and Janice Nadler
1. Introduction
102
2. How Does Law Shape Morally Laden Cognitions?
107
2.1. Informational Influence: Law as a Persuasive Source for Morality
108
2.2. Law as a Representation of Group Attitudes
111
3. How Does Law Shape Morally Laden Behaviors?
113
3.1. The Rational Choice Model: Deterrence
113
3.2. Beyond Rational Choice: Salience and Coordination
114
3.3. Beyond Rational Choice: Social Meaning
115
3.4. Behavioral Backlashes against Law
117
4. The Effect of Law on Moral Expression
119
4.1. Law and Symbolic Politics
120
4.2. Law and Group Identity
122
5. Conclusion
124
Acknowledgments
124
References
124
4. Protected Values and Omission Bias as Deontological Judgments 133
Jonathan Baron and Ilana Ritov
1. Introduction
134
1.1. Biases as Deviations from Utilitarianianism
134
1.2. Overview
136
2. Protected Values
137
3. Relation of PVs to Other Types of Judgment
138
3.1. Moralistic Values
138
3.2. Moral Realism
138
3.3. Authority Independence (vs. Social Norms or Conventions)
139
4. Omission Bias
139
5. Relation of Omission Bias to Other Biases
141
5.1. Default Bias and Status-Quo Bias
141
5.2. Indirectness and the Double Effect
142
5.3. Agent Relativity
142
5.4. Naturalism
143
5.5. Physical Proximity and Contact
143
6. Study 1: Relation of PVs to Omission Bias
143
6.1. Method
145
6.2. Results
147
6.3. Discussion
149
7. Study 2: Relation to Emotion
150
7.1. Method
151
7.2. Results
154
7.3. Follow-Up
155
8. Study 3: The Nature of Omission Bias
156
8.1. Method
157
8.2. Results
161
9. Conclusion
163
Acknowledgments
165
References
165
5. Attending to Moral Values 169
Rumen Iliev, Sonya Sachdeva, Daniel M. Bartels, Craig Joseph, Satoru Suzuki, and Douglas L. Medin
1. Introduction
170
2. Moral Values in the Laboratory
173
2.1. Contingent Valuation
173
2.2. Trade-Offs
174
2.3. Omission Bias and Quantity Insensitivity
174
2.4. Tragic vs. Taboo Trade-Offs and the Flexibility of Moral Decision Making
175
2.5. Presentation Order: Judgment in the Context of Previously Viewed Options
176
2.6. "Pseudosacred" Values?
177
2.7. Summary
177
3. A Cognitive Perspective on Sacred Values
178
3.1. Protected Values and Attention
179
3.2. Stroop Effects
179
3.3. Further Cognitive Consequences: Anchoring Effects
180
3.4. Summary
181
4. Attentional Influences and the Acceptability of Trade-Offs
182
4.1. Framing the. Question
182
4.2. Framing the Response Alternatives
183
4.3. Judgment in the Context of One versus Two Options
184
4.4. The Attraction Effect: Choosing in the Context of Three Options
185
4.5. Summary
187
5. General Discussion
188
References
190
6. Noninstrumental Reasoning over Sacred Values: An Indonesian Case Study 193
Jeremy Ginges and Scott Atran
1. Introduction
194
1.1. What are Sacred Values?
194
1.2. Redefining Sacred Values to Predict Rigidity and Flexibility
196
2. Testing the "Backfire Effect" in the Israeli?Palestinian Conflict
198
3. Sequential Offers in Negotiations over Sacred Values
199
3.1. Using a Within-Subjects Design for a Transparent Test of the Backfire Effect
200
4. Retesting the Backfire Effect in a Study of Indonesian Madrassah Students
200
4.1. The Participants: Demographic Characteristics
201
4.2. The Participants: Moral Worldview
202
4.3. The Deals
203
4.4. Results
203
5. General Discussion
204
References
205
7. Development and Dual Processes in Moral Reasoning: A Fuzzy-trace Theory Approach 207
Valerie F. Reyna and Wanda Casillas
1. Overview
208
2. An Introduction to Fuzzy-trace Theory
209
3. Building Blocks of Moral Reasoning
210
3.1. Knowledge and the Role of Gist Representations in Moral Reasoning
211
3.2. Retrieval and Application of Values to Reasoning Problems
213
3.3. Processing: The Role of Inhibition and Interference in Reasoning and Decision Making
215
3.4. Summary of Building Blocks of Moral Reasoning
216
4. Explaining Reversals and Paradoxes in Moral Reasoning
216
4.1. Framing Effects and Differences in Problem Representation
217
4.2. Insensitivity to Quantity and Relative Magnitude
221
4.3. Dual-Process Accounts of Reversals and Effects of Emotion
224
4.4. Summary of Reversals and Paradoxes in Moral Reasoning
227
5. Moral Values and Risky Decisions in Adolescence
227
6. Conclusions
229
References
232
8. Moral Identity, Moral Functioning, and the Development of Moral Character 237
Darcia Narvaez and Daniel K. Lapsley
1. Introduction
238
2. Moral Self-Identity
239
2.1. Ethical Theory and Moral Development
239
2.2. Blasi on Moral Identity
241
2.3. Personality Theory
243
3. Development of Moral Self-Identity
248
3.1. Early Development of Moral Personality
249
3.2. Community and Context Models of Moral Identity
252
4. Schemas and Moral Information Processing
256
4.1. Moral Schemas
257
5. Moral Development as Ethical Expertise Development
258
5.1. An Integrative Framework for Moral Character Education
260
6. New Directions: Neuroscience and Moral Personality
261
6.1. Triune Ethics Theory: A Neurobiological Theory of Moral Development
262
7. Conclusions
264
7.1. Experience Shapes Brain Biases
264
7.2. Moral Functioning is Multivariate
264
7.3. Moral Experts are Different from Novices
265
References
265
9. "Fools Rush In": A JDM Perspective on the Role of Emotions in Decisions, Moral and Otherwise 275
Terry Connolly and David Hardman
1. Introduction
276
1.1. Judgment and Decision Making as a Discipline
276
1.2. An Example
277
1.3. Themes and Outline of the Chapter
279
2. The Emergence of Emotion Research in JDM
280
2.1. The Cognitive Emphasis in Theories of Judgment and Decision Making
280
2.2. Emotions in Individual Decision Making
281
2.3. Emotions in Interactive Decisions
285
2.4. Summary
288
3. Feelings and Emotions in Moral Decisions
289
3.1. Some Illustrative Studies
289
3.2. Task Effects in Moral Choice
293
3.3. Complex Problems, Partial Representation
296
4. Some Conclusions and Some Suggestions
298
Acknowledgments
301
References
301
10. Motivated Moral Reasoning 307
Peter H. Ditto, David A. Pizarro, and David Tannenbaum
1. Introduction
307
2. Motivated Reasoning
309
3. Motivated Moral Reasoning
312
4. Motivated Assessments of Moral Accountability
315
4.1. Controllability and Culpability
316
4.2. Memory for the "Facts"
317
4.3. Intentionality
317
5. Motivated Use of Moral Principles
322
5.1. The Use and Abuse of Principle
322
5.2. Tales of Political Casuistry
325
5.3. Trolleys, Lifeboats, and Collateral Damage
326
5.4. Is Reliance on Moral Principles Really Motivated?
330
6. Motivated Moral Reasoning and Views of the Moral Thinker
332
References
334
11. In the Mind of the Perceiver: Psychological Implications of Moral Conviction 339
Christopher W. Bauman and Linda J. Skitka
1. Introduction
340
2. What Is Moral Conviction?
341
2.1. Psychological Characteristics Associated with Moral Conviction
342
2.2. Examples of Moral Conviction
343
3. How Does Research on Moral Conviction and Moral Judgment Differ?
345
3.1. Defining Moral Contexts
346
3.2. Interpreting Counter-normative Responses
347
3.3. Expectations about Principle-driven Cross-situational Coherence
348
3.4. Focal Situations
350
4. The Consequences of Moral Conviction on Choice and Action
353
5. Implications
358
References
359
Subject Index 363
Contents of Recent Volumes 369


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