Moral psychology is a field of study in both philosophy and psychology.
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Moral psychology is a field of study in both philosophy and psychology.
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Moral psychology eventually came to refer more broadly to various topics at the intersection of ethics, psychology, and philosophy of mind.
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Origins of moral psychology can be traced back to early philosophical works, largely concerned with moral education, such as by Plato and Aristotle in Ancient Greece, as well as from the Buddhistand Confucian traditions.
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Moral psychology identity refers to the importance of morality to a person's identity, typically construed as either a trait-like individual difference, or set of chronically accessible schemas.
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Moral psychology identity is theorized to be one of the key motivational forces connecting moral reasoning to moral behavior, as suggested by a 2016 meta-analysis reporting that moral identity is positively associated with moral behavior.
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Moral development and reasoning are two overlapping topics of study in moral psychology that have historically received a great amount of attention, even preceding the influential work of Piaget and Kohlberg.
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Moral psychology reasoning refers specifically to the study of how people think about right and wrong and how they acquire and apply moral rules.
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Moral psychology development refers more broadly to age-related changes in thoughts and emotions that guide moral beliefs, judgments and behaviors.
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Moral psychology focused on moral development as one's progression in the capacity to reason about justice.
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Moral psychology proposed six stages and three levels of development.
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Moral psychology intuitions happen immediately, automatically, and unconsciously, with reasoning largely serving to generate post-hoc rationalizations to justify one's instinctual reactions.
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Moral psychology provides four arguments to doubt causal importance of reason.
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Moral psychology emotions are a variety of social emotion that are involved in forming and communicating moral judgments and decisions, and in motivating behavioral responses to one's own and others' moral behavior.
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Researchers have begun to debate the implications moral psychology research has for other subfields of ethics such as normative ethics and meta-ethics.
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Additionally, research in moral psychology is being used to inform debates in applied ethics around moral enhancement.
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