Taking Moral Action
| Taking Moral Action |
| Autore | Huff Chuck |
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2023 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (371 pages) |
| Altri autori (Persone) | FurchertAlmut |
| Collana | Contemporary Social Issues Series |
| ISBN | 1-118-81807-5 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication Page -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- I.1 A Very Brief History of Moral Psychology -- I.2 A Fragmented Field -- I.3 Stories of Moral Action -- I.4 Considering the Scope of Moral Action -- I.5 Underlying Tensions in the Field -- I.6 Mapping the Landscape of Moral Action: The Book's Structure -- I.7 Further Reading -- References -- Part I Contexts -- Chapter 1 Evolution -- 1.1 The Social Brain -- 1.2 Basic Evolutionary Processes (With an Eye Toward Morality) -- 1.2.1 Sexual Selection -- 1.2.2 Kin (Family) Selection -- 1.2.3 Group Selection -- 1.2.4 Gene-Culture Coevolution -- 1.2.5 Evolution vs. Culture -- 1.2.6 A Note on Selfishness and Altruism -- 1.3 How to Argue That Behavior Was Selected Because It Was Adaptive -- 1.4 Evolutionary Building Blocks for a Robust Morality -- 1.4.1 Adaptive Sociality -- 1.4.2 Pro-social Behavior Strategies Based in Social Emotions -- 1.4.3 Strategic Interaction -- 1.4.4 Conscience -- 1.4.5 Moral Judgment and Reasoning -- 1.4.6 Moral Norms -- 1.5 Human Distinctiveness: How Large is the Gap? -- 1.5.1 Symbolizing and Reasoning -- 1.5.2 Time Perspective -- 1.5.3 Cognitive Control and Self-Regulation -- 1.5.4 Extensive Integration of Reason and Emotion -- 1.5.5 Extensive Culture -- 1.5.6 Self-Consciousness and Self-Awareness -- 1.5.7 Social Consciousness -- 1.5.8 Manipulation of Others' Perception -- 1.5.9 Sharing Reality With Other People -- 1.5.10 Universalized Normative Evaluations -- 1.5.11 Self-Actualization, Religious Experience, and Self-Transcendence -- 1.6 Discussion -- 1.6.1 Conclusion -- 1.6.2 Application -- 1.6.3 Open Questions -- 1.7 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 2 Neuroscience of Moral Action -- 2.1 Neural Systems and Moral Function, or How to use Neuroscience -- 2.2 Moral Ecology -- 2.2.1 Imitation and Mirror Neurons.
2.2.2 Thinking About, and With, Others -- 2.2.3 Cultural, Group, and Individual Influence on Brain Processes -- 2.2.4 Interpersonal Neuroscience -- 2.2.5 The Mutual Constitution of Brain and Cultural Processes -- 2.3 Personality -- 2.4 Moral Identity and the Self -- 2.4.1 Self-Knowledge -- 2.4.2 Self-Conscious Emotion -- 2.5 Skills and Knowledge -- 2.6 Moral Reason -- 2.6.1 Pure Reason -- 2.6.2 Balancing Reason and (Social/Emotional) Reward -- 2.6.3 Blending Reason and Emotion -- 2.6.4 Planning for Cognitive-Emotional Effectiveness -- 2.7 Moral Emotion -- 2.7.1 Emotion as Bias -- 2.7.2 Questioning the Cognitive/Emotion Distinction -- 2.8 Moral Formation -- 2.8.1 Empathy -- 2.8.2 The Value Space of Moral Formation -- 2.9 Discussion -- 2.9.1 Conclusion -- 2.9.2 Application -- 2.9.3 Open Questions -- 2.10 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 3 Moral Ecology -- 3.1 How Moral Ecology Changes the Conversation -- 3.1.1 Why Moral Ecology? -- 3.1.2 Beyond Virtues vs. the Situation -- 3.2 Culture and Moral Diversity -- 3.2.1 Moral Diversity Within Cultures -- 3.2.2 Patterns in Moral Diversity Across Cultures -- 3.3 Moral Ecology at the Organization Level -- 3.3.1 Organizational Values and Goals -- 3.3.2 Processes Supporting Organizational Corruption -- 3.4 Close Relationships in Friendship and Community -- 3.5 Influencing the Moral Ecology -- 3.5.1 Organizational Ethics As a Design Problem -- 3.5.2 Moral Exemplars and Social Reformers -- 3.5.3 Moral Action as Critique and as Design -- 3.5.4 Leadership -- 3.6 Discussion -- 3.6.1 Conclusion -- 3.6.2 Application -- 3.6.3 Open Questions -- 3.7 Further Readings -- References -- Part II Influences -- Chapter 4 Personality -- 4.1 Beyond Character as Traits -- 4.1.1 Personality as Adaptive -- 4.1.2 Personality as Pluralistic -- 4.1.3 Personality as Integrative -- 4.2 Personality Influences on Moral Action. 4.2.1 Dispositional Moral Traits -- 4.2.2 Characteristic Moral Adaptations -- 4.2.3 Narrative Identity -- 4.3 Discussion -- 4.3.1 Conclusion -- 4.3.2 Application -- 4.3.3 Open Questions -- 4.4 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 5 Moral Identity and the Self -- 5.1 From the Judgment-Action Gap to Moral Identity -- 5.2 The Varieties of Self: Or What is Moral Identity? -- 5.2.1 The Self is Multidimensional -- 5.2.2 The Self is Variable Over Time -- 5.2.3 The Self is Often Domain Specific -- 5.3 How Does the Moral Self-Concept Influence Action? -- 5.3.1 Two Forms of Moral Integrity -- 5.3.2 How Are These Aspects Consistent? -- 5.3.3 If Moral Evaluation is So Complex, Can We Ever Hold Each Other Accountable? -- 5.4 Critiques of the Moral Self -- 5.5 Discussion -- 5.5.1 Conclusion -- 5.5.2 Application -- 5.5.3 Open Questions -- 5.6 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 6 Skills and Knowledge -- 6.1 General Skills -- 6.1.1 Self-Reflection -- 6.1.2 Self-Regulation -- 6.1.3 Moral Attentiveness -- 6.1.4 Moral Imagination -- 6.2 Domain-Specific Skills -- 6.3 Expert Performance -- 6.3.1 The Development of Expertise -- 6.3.2 Automaticity in Expertise -- 6.3.3 What Knowledge and Skill? -- 6.3.4 Domain Specificity -- 6.4 Habits -- 6.4.1 How Are Habits Regulated? -- 6.5 Skills Go Awry -- 6.6 Discussion -- 6.6.1 Conclusion -- 6.6.2 Application -- 6.6.3 Open Questions -- 6.7 Further Readings -- References -- Part III Processes -- Chapter 7 Moral Reason -- 7.1 What Kind of Reason? -- 7.2 Kohlberg, Relativism, and Moral Reason -- 7.2.1 Kohlberg's System for Challenging Moral Relativism -- 7.2.2 Critiques of Kohlberg's System -- 7.2.3 What Remains of Kohlberg -- 7.3 Implicit Cognition and Two-Process Models -- 7.3.1 What Are Two-Process Models? -- 7.3.2 Complexities of Two-Process Approaches -- 7.3.3 Contents of Type 1 Processes. 7.3.4 Critiques of Two-Process Models -- 7.4 Naturalistic Moral Cognition -- 7.5 Reasoning Goes Awry: Two Paths to Moral Failure -- 7.5.1 Moral Identity and Moral Failure -- 7.5.2 Moral Distancing and Moral Failure -- 7.5.3 Reflective Equilibrium and Moral Failure -- 7.6 Discussion -- 7.6.1 Conclusion -- 7.6.2 Application -- 7.6.3 Open Questions -- 7.7 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 8 Moral Emotion -- 8.1 An Overview of Theories of Emotion -- 8.1.1 Basic Emotion Theories -- 8.1.2 Appraisal Emotion Theories -- 8.1.3 Cultural Emotion Theories -- 8.1.4 Constructionist Models of Emotion -- 8.1.5 Preliminary Conclusions About Emotions and Morality -- 8.2 The Moral Emotions -- 8.2.1 Other-Condemning Moral Emotions -- 8.2.2 Other-Suffering Moral Emotions -- 8.2.3 Self-Conscious Emotions -- 8.2.4 Other-Praising Moral Emotions -- 8.3 Learning Moral Emotions -- 8.4 Discussion -- 8.4.1 Conclusion -- 8.4.2 Application -- 8.4.3 Open Questions -- 8.5 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 9 Moral Formation: Shaping Moral Action -- 9.1 Traditional Accounts of Moral Formation -- 9.1.1 Bildung -- 9.1.2 Existential Appropriation -- 9.1.3 Monastic/Spiritual Formation -- 9.1.4 Themes and Questions from the Traditions -- 9.2 Evaluative-Self-Transformative Aspects of Moral Formation -- 9.2.1 Telling Stories -- 9.2.2 Critique from the Three Traditions -- 9.3 Normative/Self-Transcending Aspects of Moral Formation -- 9.3.1 Value Dimensions of Normative Formation -- 9.3.2 A Three-Dimensional Moral Formation Space: Self-Transcendence, Openness, and Inclusion -- 9.3.3 Direction of Change in Moral Formation -- 9.3.4 Critique from the Three Traditions -- 9.4 Educative Aspects of Moral Formation -- 9.4.1 Moral Formation as Planned Moral Ecology -- 9.4.2 Moral Formation as Social Influence -- 9.4.3 Moral Formation as Cultural Conservation and Critique. 9.4.4 Moral Formation and Moral Luck -- 9.4.5 Critique from the Three Traditions -- 9.5 Discussion -- 9.5.1 Conclusion -- 9.5.2 Application -- 9.5.3 Open Questions -- 9.6 Further Readings -- References -- Coda: Taking Moral Action -- Index -- EULA. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910830705403321 |
Huff Chuck
|
||
| Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2023 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
Taking Moral Action
| Taking Moral Action |
| Autore | Huff Chuck |
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2023 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (371 pages) |
| Disciplina | 155.7 |
| Altri autori (Persone) | FurchertAlmut |
| Collana | Contemporary Social Issues Series |
| Soggetto topico |
Moral motivation
Psychology and philosophy |
| ISBN |
9781118818077
1118818075 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication Page -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- I.1 A Very Brief History of Moral Psychology -- I.2 A Fragmented Field -- I.3 Stories of Moral Action -- I.4 Considering the Scope of Moral Action -- I.5 Underlying Tensions in the Field -- I.6 Mapping the Landscape of Moral Action: The Book's Structure -- I.7 Further Reading -- References -- Part I Contexts -- Chapter 1 Evolution -- 1.1 The Social Brain -- 1.2 Basic Evolutionary Processes (With an Eye Toward Morality) -- 1.2.1 Sexual Selection -- 1.2.2 Kin (Family) Selection -- 1.2.3 Group Selection -- 1.2.4 Gene-Culture Coevolution -- 1.2.5 Evolution vs. Culture -- 1.2.6 A Note on Selfishness and Altruism -- 1.3 How to Argue That Behavior Was Selected Because It Was Adaptive -- 1.4 Evolutionary Building Blocks for a Robust Morality -- 1.4.1 Adaptive Sociality -- 1.4.2 Pro-social Behavior Strategies Based in Social Emotions -- 1.4.3 Strategic Interaction -- 1.4.4 Conscience -- 1.4.5 Moral Judgment and Reasoning -- 1.4.6 Moral Norms -- 1.5 Human Distinctiveness: How Large is the Gap? -- 1.5.1 Symbolizing and Reasoning -- 1.5.2 Time Perspective -- 1.5.3 Cognitive Control and Self-Regulation -- 1.5.4 Extensive Integration of Reason and Emotion -- 1.5.5 Extensive Culture -- 1.5.6 Self-Consciousness and Self-Awareness -- 1.5.7 Social Consciousness -- 1.5.8 Manipulation of Others' Perception -- 1.5.9 Sharing Reality With Other People -- 1.5.10 Universalized Normative Evaluations -- 1.5.11 Self-Actualization, Religious Experience, and Self-Transcendence -- 1.6 Discussion -- 1.6.1 Conclusion -- 1.6.2 Application -- 1.6.3 Open Questions -- 1.7 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 2 Neuroscience of Moral Action -- 2.1 Neural Systems and Moral Function, or How to use Neuroscience -- 2.2 Moral Ecology -- 2.2.1 Imitation and Mirror Neurons.
2.2.2 Thinking About, and With, Others -- 2.2.3 Cultural, Group, and Individual Influence on Brain Processes -- 2.2.4 Interpersonal Neuroscience -- 2.2.5 The Mutual Constitution of Brain and Cultural Processes -- 2.3 Personality -- 2.4 Moral Identity and the Self -- 2.4.1 Self-Knowledge -- 2.4.2 Self-Conscious Emotion -- 2.5 Skills and Knowledge -- 2.6 Moral Reason -- 2.6.1 Pure Reason -- 2.6.2 Balancing Reason and (Social/Emotional) Reward -- 2.6.3 Blending Reason and Emotion -- 2.6.4 Planning for Cognitive-Emotional Effectiveness -- 2.7 Moral Emotion -- 2.7.1 Emotion as Bias -- 2.7.2 Questioning the Cognitive/Emotion Distinction -- 2.8 Moral Formation -- 2.8.1 Empathy -- 2.8.2 The Value Space of Moral Formation -- 2.9 Discussion -- 2.9.1 Conclusion -- 2.9.2 Application -- 2.9.3 Open Questions -- 2.10 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 3 Moral Ecology -- 3.1 How Moral Ecology Changes the Conversation -- 3.1.1 Why Moral Ecology? -- 3.1.2 Beyond Virtues vs. the Situation -- 3.2 Culture and Moral Diversity -- 3.2.1 Moral Diversity Within Cultures -- 3.2.2 Patterns in Moral Diversity Across Cultures -- 3.3 Moral Ecology at the Organization Level -- 3.3.1 Organizational Values and Goals -- 3.3.2 Processes Supporting Organizational Corruption -- 3.4 Close Relationships in Friendship and Community -- 3.5 Influencing the Moral Ecology -- 3.5.1 Organizational Ethics As a Design Problem -- 3.5.2 Moral Exemplars and Social Reformers -- 3.5.3 Moral Action as Critique and as Design -- 3.5.4 Leadership -- 3.6 Discussion -- 3.6.1 Conclusion -- 3.6.2 Application -- 3.6.3 Open Questions -- 3.7 Further Readings -- References -- Part II Influences -- Chapter 4 Personality -- 4.1 Beyond Character as Traits -- 4.1.1 Personality as Adaptive -- 4.1.2 Personality as Pluralistic -- 4.1.3 Personality as Integrative -- 4.2 Personality Influences on Moral Action. 4.2.1 Dispositional Moral Traits -- 4.2.2 Characteristic Moral Adaptations -- 4.2.3 Narrative Identity -- 4.3 Discussion -- 4.3.1 Conclusion -- 4.3.2 Application -- 4.3.3 Open Questions -- 4.4 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 5 Moral Identity and the Self -- 5.1 From the Judgment-Action Gap to Moral Identity -- 5.2 The Varieties of Self: Or What is Moral Identity? -- 5.2.1 The Self is Multidimensional -- 5.2.2 The Self is Variable Over Time -- 5.2.3 The Self is Often Domain Specific -- 5.3 How Does the Moral Self-Concept Influence Action? -- 5.3.1 Two Forms of Moral Integrity -- 5.3.2 How Are These Aspects Consistent? -- 5.3.3 If Moral Evaluation is So Complex, Can We Ever Hold Each Other Accountable? -- 5.4 Critiques of the Moral Self -- 5.5 Discussion -- 5.5.1 Conclusion -- 5.5.2 Application -- 5.5.3 Open Questions -- 5.6 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 6 Skills and Knowledge -- 6.1 General Skills -- 6.1.1 Self-Reflection -- 6.1.2 Self-Regulation -- 6.1.3 Moral Attentiveness -- 6.1.4 Moral Imagination -- 6.2 Domain-Specific Skills -- 6.3 Expert Performance -- 6.3.1 The Development of Expertise -- 6.3.2 Automaticity in Expertise -- 6.3.3 What Knowledge and Skill? -- 6.3.4 Domain Specificity -- 6.4 Habits -- 6.4.1 How Are Habits Regulated? -- 6.5 Skills Go Awry -- 6.6 Discussion -- 6.6.1 Conclusion -- 6.6.2 Application -- 6.6.3 Open Questions -- 6.7 Further Readings -- References -- Part III Processes -- Chapter 7 Moral Reason -- 7.1 What Kind of Reason? -- 7.2 Kohlberg, Relativism, and Moral Reason -- 7.2.1 Kohlberg's System for Challenging Moral Relativism -- 7.2.2 Critiques of Kohlberg's System -- 7.2.3 What Remains of Kohlberg -- 7.3 Implicit Cognition and Two-Process Models -- 7.3.1 What Are Two-Process Models? -- 7.3.2 Complexities of Two-Process Approaches -- 7.3.3 Contents of Type 1 Processes. 7.3.4 Critiques of Two-Process Models -- 7.4 Naturalistic Moral Cognition -- 7.5 Reasoning Goes Awry: Two Paths to Moral Failure -- 7.5.1 Moral Identity and Moral Failure -- 7.5.2 Moral Distancing and Moral Failure -- 7.5.3 Reflective Equilibrium and Moral Failure -- 7.6 Discussion -- 7.6.1 Conclusion -- 7.6.2 Application -- 7.6.3 Open Questions -- 7.7 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 8 Moral Emotion -- 8.1 An Overview of Theories of Emotion -- 8.1.1 Basic Emotion Theories -- 8.1.2 Appraisal Emotion Theories -- 8.1.3 Cultural Emotion Theories -- 8.1.4 Constructionist Models of Emotion -- 8.1.5 Preliminary Conclusions About Emotions and Morality -- 8.2 The Moral Emotions -- 8.2.1 Other-Condemning Moral Emotions -- 8.2.2 Other-Suffering Moral Emotions -- 8.2.3 Self-Conscious Emotions -- 8.2.4 Other-Praising Moral Emotions -- 8.3 Learning Moral Emotions -- 8.4 Discussion -- 8.4.1 Conclusion -- 8.4.2 Application -- 8.4.3 Open Questions -- 8.5 Further Readings -- References -- Chapter 9 Moral Formation: Shaping Moral Action -- 9.1 Traditional Accounts of Moral Formation -- 9.1.1 Bildung -- 9.1.2 Existential Appropriation -- 9.1.3 Monastic/Spiritual Formation -- 9.1.4 Themes and Questions from the Traditions -- 9.2 Evaluative-Self-Transformative Aspects of Moral Formation -- 9.2.1 Telling Stories -- 9.2.2 Critique from the Three Traditions -- 9.3 Normative/Self-Transcending Aspects of Moral Formation -- 9.3.1 Value Dimensions of Normative Formation -- 9.3.2 A Three-Dimensional Moral Formation Space: Self-Transcendence, Openness, and Inclusion -- 9.3.3 Direction of Change in Moral Formation -- 9.3.4 Critique from the Three Traditions -- 9.4 Educative Aspects of Moral Formation -- 9.4.1 Moral Formation as Planned Moral Ecology -- 9.4.2 Moral Formation as Social Influence -- 9.4.3 Moral Formation as Cultural Conservation and Critique. 9.4.4 Moral Formation and Moral Luck -- 9.4.5 Critique from the Three Traditions -- 9.5 Discussion -- 9.5.1 Conclusion -- 9.5.2 Application -- 9.5.3 Open Questions -- 9.6 Further Readings -- References -- Coda: Taking Moral Action -- Index -- EULA. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9911019887803321 |
Huff Chuck
|
||
| Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2023 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||