What wrongdoers deserve : the moral reasoning behind responses to misconduct

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

What wrongdoers deserve : the moral reasoning behind responses to misconduct

R. Murray Thomas and Ann Diver-Stamnes

(Contributions in psychology, no. 21)

Greenwood Press, 1993

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [163]-164) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This study analyzes the reasoning process through which individuals determine what consequences are appropriate for those who do wrong. The authors presented six cases of wrongdoing to a large number of teenagers and young adults. This sample was asked what consequences would be appropriate for the wrongdoers and why those proposed consequences would be appropriate. On the basis of the data obtained from the participants, the authors constructed a taxonomy to use in categorizing features of moral reasoning. The authors then applied the taxonomy to compare group and individual modes of moral decision making. The study is significant in its reliance on original data and on its analysis of the thought processes involved in moral decision making.

Table of Contents

The Nature of the Study The Six Cases of Wrongdoing The People Who Furnished Opinions A Taxonomy of Rationales to Support Proposed Consequences Moral Values: Principles and Conditions Purposes and Causes Feasibility and Agents Group and Individual Comparisons Proposed Consequences Moral Principles and Conditions Affecting Their Application Purposes, Causes, Feasibility, and Agent Qualifications Gender Comparisons Individual Styles of Moral Reasoning Postscript An Overview, Applications, and Research Projects References Index

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