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Moral Dilemma Approach

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Title: Moral Dilemma Approach


1
Moral Dilemma Approach
  • Write the alternatives you think a person has in
    making his/her decision about the dilemma and the
    possible consequences each alternative might
    have.
  • Alternative 1 _______________
  • Consequence _______________
  • Consequence _______________
  • Alternative 2 _______________
  • Consequence _______________
  • Consequence _______________

2
Lawrence Kohlberg (1927-1987)
  • Harvard University professor of
  • developmental psychology, later moved
  • to the field of moral education
  • His theory of moral development was dependent on
    the thinking of the Swiss child psychologist Jean
    Piaget and the American philosopher and educator
    John Dewey
  • These men emphasized that human beings develop
    philosophically and psychologically in a
    progressive fashion.

3
Hierarchical order of morality
  • FIRST LEVEL Preconventional
  • Stage 1 defer to authority (obedience and
    punishment) Simple Authority Orientation
  • People behave to socially acceptable norms
    because they are told to do so by some authority
    figure (parent, teacher). This obedience is
    compelled by the threat or application of
    punishment. (soldiers carrying out orders under
    threat of punishment)

4
  • Stage 2 satisfy own needs Instrumental
    Relativist
  • Right behavior means acting in ones own best
    interests satisfies one's own needs and
    occasionally the needs of others
  • (People are valued in terms of their utility)
  • You scratch my back, Ill scratch yours
  • Justice Do unto others as they do unto you

5
Relativism
  • Most often associated with an empirical
  • thesis that there are deep and widespread
  • moral disagreements and that the truth or
  • justification of moral judgments is not
  • absolute, but relative to some group of
  • persons.
  • verifiable or provable by means of observation
    or experiment

6
  • SECOND LEVEL Conventional Morality
  • Stage 3 Interpersonal Concordance
  • seek others approval by conforming to
    stereotypes
  • (good boy/good girl) Examples?
  • -conformity to the behavioral expectations of
    one's society or peers

7
  • Stage 4 Law and Order
  • individual is oriented toward authority, fixed
    rules, and the maintenance of the social order
  • This stage is marked by obeying laws, respecting
    authority, and performing ones duties so that
    the social order is maintained.

8
  • THIRD LEVEL Post Conventional
  • Stage 5 Social Contract and Individual Rights
  • a good society is best conceived as a social
    contract into which people freely enter to work
    toward the benefit of all
  • Considers the rights and values that a society
    should uphold
  • Contractual, legalistic orientation but laws
    can be changed for the benefit of society
  • (belief that rational people want certain basic
    rights liberty and life and want democratic
    procedures for changing unfair laws and improving
    society)

9
  • Stage 6 Ethical Principle
  • more of a theoretical stage
  • Individual acts out of universal principles
    based on the equality and worth of all human
    beings.
  • These principles are abstract and ethical (the
  • Golden Rule, the categorical imperative)
  • (see Kant)
  • Orientation to principles above social rules

10
Immanuel Kant
  • The philosophical concept of a categorical
    imperative is central to the moral philosophy of
    Immanuel Kant. In his philosophy, it indicates an
    absolute, unconditional requirement that allows
    no exceptions, and is both required and justified
    as an end in itself, not as a means to some other
    end.

11
  • Individuals progress through stages one at a
    time there is no jumping from one stage to
    another
  • Like Piaget, Kohlberg believed that most moral
    development occurs through social interaction.

12
Carol Gilligan (1936 - )
  • Earned her doctorate in
  • social psychology from Harvard
  • University
  • research assistant for Lawrence
  • Kohlberg
  • Her criticisms of Kohlbergs sex-biased theory
    were published in her most famous book titled, In
    a Different Voice Psychological Theory and
    Women's Development (1982)

13
  • Gilligan argues that Kohlbergs stages reflect a
    male orientation
  • Menrules, rights, abstract principles
  • Womenrules rights but also interpersonal
    relationships and the ethics of compassion and
    care
  • Women's morality is more contextualized, it is
    tied to real, ongoing relationships rather than
    abstract solutions to hypothetical dilemmas
  • circumstances in which an event occurs

14
Gilligans Stages
  • Stage 1 focus on caring for self for survival
  • Stage 2 transition from selfishness to
    responsibility to others
  • Stage 3 focus on care and conformity, with
    desire to please others (sacrifice of self)
  • Stage 4 transition from self sacrifice as
    goodness to concern with truth of Self as worthy
    person

15
  • Stage 5 equalization between self and others
  • Stage 6 care becomes a self chosen principle,
    accompanied by condemnation of exploitation and
    hurt of self and others
  • ___________________________________
  • -women undergo a moral development distinct from
    but parallel to that of men

16
  • Many psychologists now disagree with the
    empirical claim that men and women differ in
    their moral reasoning in the way Gilligan
    outlines
  • Several studies have found that both men and
    women use both justice and care dimensions in
    their moral reasoning
  • Question How do you determine what is the
    right action to take? How do you know what you
    should do?
  • proof by means of observation or experiment

17
Differences between Mens Womens Moral Voices
  • Men Women
  • -care
  • -responsibility
  • -concern with everyones suffering
  • -preserve emotional connectedness
  • -responsibility toward real individuals

-justice -rights -treat everyone fairly and the
same -apply rules impartially to
everyone -responsibility toward abstract codes of
conduct
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