Title: Morality in everyday life : developmental perspectives
Abstract:Introduction Daniel Hart and Melanie Killen Part I. The Acquisition of Morality: 1. The social construction of character in toddlerhood Dale Hay, Jennifer Castle, Carol A. Stimson, and Lisa Davies 2. ...Introduction Daniel Hart and Melanie Killen Part I. The Acquisition of Morality: 1. The social construction of character in toddlerhood Dale Hay, Jennifer Castle, Carol A. Stimson, and Lisa Davies 2. Morality, autonomy, and social conflict Melanie Killen and Larry P. Nucci 3. Children's conceptions of sociomoral affect: happy victimizers, mixed emotions, and other expectancies William Arsenio and Anthony Lover Part II. Social Judgment in Different Contexts: 4. Obedience to authority in children and adults Marta Laupa, Elliot Turiel, and Philip Cowan 5. Social contexts in social cognition: psychological harm and civil liberties Charles C. Helwig 6. Psychological and philosophical considerations of prudence and morality Marvin Berkowitz, Jeffrey P. Kahn, Gregg Mulry, and Jeanne Piette 7. Context, conflict, and constraint in adolescent-parent authority relationships Judith G. Smetana Part III. Social Judgment in Different Cultures: 8. Development in the context of everyday family relationships: culture, interpersonal morality and adaptation Joan G. Miller and David Bersoff 9. Diversity in social development: between or within cultures Cecilia Wainryb and Elliot Turiel Part IV. Moral Integration and Character: 10. Moral commitment in inner-city adolescents Daniel Hart, Miranda Yates, Suzanne Fegley, and Gerry Wilson 11. The development of extraordinary moral commitment Anne Colby and William Damon 12. Reasoning about morality and real-life moral problems Lawrence J. Walker, Russell C. Pitts, Karl H. Hennig and M. Kyle Matsuba.Read More
Publication Year: 1995
Publication Date: 1995-01-01
Language: en
Type: book
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 374
AI Researcher Chatbot
Get quick answers to your questions about the article from our AI researcher chatbot