Results 251 to 260 of about 13,557 (292)
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The Moral Psychology of Moral Responsibility

2022
AbstractIn this chapter I survey the two main families of views about the mental capacities that distinguish responsible agents from non-responsible agents. These are self-expression views, which maintain that responsible agency is essentially about being able to express one's practical stance or moral orientation in conduct; and reasons-responsiveness
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From Ecological to Moral Psychology: Morality and the Psychology of Egon Brunswik

Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology, 2000
Abstract Moral judgment and behavior are uniquely resistant to psychological analysis because morality generally is defined in terms that do not admit of psychological predication. Principal among these is the idea of freedom. An agent can act morally only on the condition that it is also free to do otherwise.
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Moral Psychology

2020
Nietzsche gives an important role to psychology in his revaluative project. This and the next chapter focus on those aspects that concern the explanation of action and motivation. Many commentators place ‘will to power’ at the centre of his philosophical psychology.
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Moral Psychology and the Unity of Morality

Utilitas, 2015
Jonathan Haidt's research on moral cognition has revealed that political liberals moralize mostly in terms of Harm and Fairness, whereas conservatives moralize in terms of those plus loyalty to Ingroup, respect for Authority, and Purity (or IAP). Some have concluded that the norms of morality encompass a wide variety of subject matters with no deep ...
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Psychology contra Morality

open access: yes, 2018
This chapter summarizes key elements of the challenge psychology has posed to morality beginning with Freud and extending to three consequential claims of the current literature on social psychology and cognitive science: the undermining of deliberative ...
Amanda Anderson
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MORALIZED PSYCHOLOGY OR PSYCHOLOGIZED MORALITY? ETHICS AND PSYCHOLOGY IN RECENT THEORIZING ABOUT MORAL AND CHARACTER EDUCATION

Educational Theory, 2007
Abstract Moral philosophy seems well placed to claim the key role in theorizing about moral education. Indeed, moral philosophers have from antiquity had much to say about psychological and other processes of moral formation. Given this history, it may seem ironic that much systematic latter‐day theorizing about moral education has been social ...
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Psychology of the Moral Self

1897
After more than ten years teaching ancient Greek history and philosophy at University College, Oxford, the British philosopher and political theorist Bernard Bosanquet (1848–1923) resigned from his post to spend more time writing. He was particularly interested in contemporary social theory, including the social ramifications of the growing field of ...
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Hume’s Moral Psychology

1993
Abstract IN 1927, A. E. Taylor concluded his Leslie Stephen Lecture on ‘David Hume and the Miraculous’ with a judgement of Hume’s attitude to his philosophical work that has been held by many other readers of Hume: Taylor is here expressing an attitude to Hume that many of us have felt: that his philosophy does not ...
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Morality and Psychology

Philosophy Compass, 2006
Abstract This article briefly discusses the connection between moral philosophy and moral psychology, and then explores three intriguing areas of inquiry that fall within the intersection of the two fields. The areas of inquiry considered focus on (1) debates concerning the nature of moral judgments and moral motivation; (2) debates ...
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Moral nativism and moral psychology.

2012
Moral psychology is both old and new. Old because moral thought has long been a central focus of theology and philosophy. Indeed, many of the theories that we explore today were proposed first by scholars such as Aristotle, Kant, and Hume. Young because the scientific study of morality—and, specifically, the study of what goes on in a person’s head ...
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