Title: Kohlberg
1Kohlbergs Theory of Moral DevelopmentMUST BE
INCORPORATED INTO YOUR TIMELINE PAPER!! YOU
SHOULD USE PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF MORAL DILEMAS
THAT YOU HAVE DEALT WITH.
2Lawrence Kohlberg
- Author of a three-stage theory on how moral
reasoning develops - Moral reasoning is the aspect of cognitive
development that has to do with the way an
individual reasons about moral decisions
3Kohlbergs Theory of Moral Development
- Assessed moral reasoning by posing hypothetical
moral dilemmas and examining the reasoning behind
peoples answers - Proposed three distinct levels of moral
reasoning preconventional, conventional, and
postconventional - Each level is based on the degree to which a
person conforms to conventional standards of
society - Each level has two stages that represent
different degrees of sophistication in moral
reasoning.
4Kohlbergs Moral Dilemma
- In Europe, a woman was near death from a special
kind of cancer. There was one drug that the
doctors thought might save her. It was a form of
radium that a druggist in the same town had
recently discovered. the drug was expensive to
make, but the druggist was charging ten times
what the drug cost him to make. He paid 400 for
the radium and charged 4,000 for a small dose of
the drug. 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, which is half of what it cost. He
told the druggist that his wife was dying, and
asked him to sell it cheaper or let him pay
later. But the druggist said, "No, I discovered
the drug and I'm going to make money from it."
So, having tried every legal means, Heinz gets
desperate and considers breaking into the man's
store to steal the drug for his wife. - Should Heinz steal the drug? Why or why not?
5Levels of Moral Reasoning
- Preconventionalmoral reasoning is based on
external rewards and punishments - Conventionallaws and rules are upheld simply
because they are laws and rules - Postconventionalreasoning based on personal
moral standards
61. Preconventional Moral Reasoning
- Characterized by the desire to avoid punishment
or gain reward - Typically children under the age of 10
72. Conventional Moral Reasoning
- Primary concern is to fit in and play the role of
a good citizen - People have a strong desire to follow the rules
and laws. - Typical of most adults
83. Postconventional Moral Reasoning
- Characterized by references to universal ethical
principles that represent protecting the rights
or of all people - Most adults do not reach this level.
9Preconventional Moral Reasoning
10Stage 1 Punishment Obedience
- A focus on direct consequences
- Negative actions will result in punishments
- EXAMPLE Heinz shouldnt steal the drug because
hed go to jail if he got caught.
11Stage 2 Mutual Benefit
- Getting what one wants often requires giving
something up in return - Right is a fair exchange.
- Morals guided by what is fair
- EXAMPLE Heinz should steal the drug because the
durggist is being greedy by charging so much.
12Conventional Moral Reasoning
13Stage 3 Interpersonal Expectations
- An attempt to live up to the expectations of
important others - Follow rules or do what others would want so that
you win their approval - Negative actions will harm those relationships
- EXAMPLE Heinz should try to steal the drug
because thats what a devoted husband would do.
14Stage 4 Law-and-Order
- To maintain social order, people must resist
personal pressures and follow the laws of the
larger society - Respect the laws authority
- EXAMPLE Heinz should not steal the drug because
that would be against the law and he has duty to
uphold the law.
15Postconventional Moral Reasoning
16Stage 5 Legal Principles
- Must protect the basic rights of all people by
upholding the legal principles of fairness,
justice, equality democracy. - Laws that fail to promote general welfare or that
violate ethical principles can be changed,
reinterpreted, or abandoned - EXAMPLE Heinz should steal the drug because his
obligation to save his wifes life must take
precedence over his obligation to respect the
druggists property rights.
17Stage 6 Universal Moral Principles
- Self-chosen ethical principles
- Profound respect for sanctity of human life,
nonviolence, equality human dignity - Moral principles take precedence over laws that
might conflict with them, - Conscientious objectors refuses to be drafted
because they are morally opposed to war. - EXAMPLE Heinz should steal the drug even if the
person was a stranger and not his wife. He must
follow his conscience and not let the druggists
desire for money outweigh the value of a human
life.
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19Criticisms of Kohlbergs theory
- Research has not supported Kohlbergs belief that
the development of abstract thinking in
adolescence invariably leads people to the
formation of idealistic moral principles - Some cross-cultural psychologists argue that
Kohlbergs stories and scoring system reflect a
Western emphasis on individual rights, harm, and
justice that is not shared in many cultures. - Kohlbergs early research was conducted entirely
with male subjects, yet it became the basis for a
theory applied to both males and females.
20Other Dilemmas to Consider
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