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: Moral Judgment and Decision Making

✍ Scribed by Brian H. Ross (Eds.)


Publisher
Academic Press
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Leaves
376
Series
Psychology of Learning and Motivation 50
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This volume presents a variety of perspectives from within and outside moral psychology.Β  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.Β  Interests in moral phenomena have spawned several separate lines of research that appear to address similar concerns from a variety of perspectives.Β  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. Β  The first two chapters discuss the role of mental representation in moral judgment and reasoning.Β  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.Β  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. Β  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.Β  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.Β  Ginges follows with a discussion of how these value-related processes influence cognition and behavior outside the laboratory, in high-stakes, real-world conflicts. Β  Two subsequent chapters discuss further building blocks of moral cognition.Β  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.Β  Their theoretical framework is also very relevant to the phenomena discussed in the Sloman et al., Baron and Ritov, and Iliev et al. chapters. Β  The final three chapters are centrally focused on the interplay of hot andΒ cold cognition.Β  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.Β  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.Β  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.Β  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.Β  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.

✦ Table of Contents


Content:
Copyright Page
Page iv

Contributors to Volume 383
Pages ix-x

Preface
Pages xi-xii
Dan Bartels, Chris Bauman, Linda Skitka, Doug Medin

Chapter 1 Causal Models: The Representational Infrastructure for Moral Judgment Review Article
Pages 1-26
Steven A. Sloman, Philip M. Fernbach, Scott Ewing

Chapter 2 Moral Grammar and Intuitive Jurisprudence: A Formal Model of Unconscious Moral and Legal Knowledge Review Article
Pages 27-100
John Mikhail

Chapter 3 Law, Psychology, and Morality Review Article
Pages 101-131
Kenworthey Bilz, Janice Nadler

Chapter 4 Protected Values and Omission Bias as Deontological Judgments Review Article
Pages 133-167
Jonathan Baron, Ilana Ritov

Chapter 5 Attending to Moral Values Review Article
Pages 169-192
Rumen Iliev, Sonya Sachdeva, Daniel M. Bartels, Craig Joseph, Satoru Suzuki, Douglas L. Medin

Chapter 6 Noninstrumental Reasoning over Sacred Values: An Indonesian Case Study Review Article
Pages 193-206
Jeremy Ginges, Scott Atran

Chapter 7 Development and Dual Processes in Moral Reasoning: A Fuzzy‐trace Theory Approach Review Article
Pages 207-236
Valerie F. Reyna, Wanda Casillas

Chapter 8 Moral Identity, Moral Functioning, and the Development of Moral Character Review Article
Pages 237-274
Darcia Narvaez, Daniel K. Lapsley

Chapter 9 β€œFools Rush In”: A JDM Perspective on the Role of Emotions in Decisions, Moral and Otherwise Review Article
Pages 275-306
Terry Connolly, David Hardman

Chapter 10 Motivated Moral Reasoning Review Article
Pages 307-338
Peter H. Ditto, David A. Pizarro, David Tannenbaum

Chapter 11 In the Mind of the Perceiver: Psychological Implications of Moral Conviction Review Article
Pages 339-362
Christopher W. Bauman, Linda J. Skitka

Series Editors
Page ii

Subject Index
Pages 363-368

Contents of recent volumes
Pages 369-371


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