Ideology and intuition in moral education
Graham, J., Haidt, J. & Rimm-Kaufman, S. E. (2008). Ideology and intuition in moral education. European Journal of Developmental Science, 2, 269-286.
Abstract: We propose that social psychological findings on the
intuitive bases of moral judgment have broad implications for moral
education. The “five foundations theory of intuitive ethics” is applied
to explain a longstanding rift in moral education as an ideological
disagreement about which moral intuitions should be endorsed and
cultivated. The Kohlbergian moral reasoning side has sought to limit
the domain of moral education to Harm- and Fairness-related moral
concerns, whereas character education approaches have tried also to
cultivate intuitions concerning the Ingroup, Authority and Purity
foundations. Recent attempts to merge the two lines of moral education
have not fully addressed this ideological rift, for example by
delineating how a single approach could reconcile opposing group- and
individual-focused conceptions of moral education. We conclude that
psychological research on moral intuition offers a descriptive account
of human morality that reveals problems with attempts to create a
normative basis for moral education from either side of the ideological
divide.
(My publication)Posted: Wednesday, February 18, 2009
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