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Moral dilemmas of bulimics and non-bulimics : a study of voice and self in eating disordersWiggum, Candice Diehl 26 November 1991 (has links)
The central question of this study was to examine the moral orientation
and the role of self in subject generated moral dilemmas for information on
the developmental and cultural forces contributing to the etiology and
maintenance of eating disorders in college women. The research was based
on the theories of Carol Gilligan (1982, 1988, 1990).
Twelve women identified as bulimic by therapists and twelve women
with no eating disorder were administered the BULIT-R and the moral
conflict and choice interview. A Guide to Reading Narratives of Moral Conflict
and Choice for Self and Moral Voice provided the framework for analyzing
the the interviews.
Using Chi squares to analyze the data, no significant differences were
found between the two groups on presence, predominance, and alignment
of the moral voices of care and justice or on relationship framework, although
a trend toward the bulimic sample aligning both with the justice and care
orientations was noted. The bulimic sample expressed one or more of the
vulnerabilities of care and both care and justice significantly more often than
the comparison sample. No difference was found for expression of self care,
though the quality of self care expressed was different. Subjects from the
bulimic sample mentioned self care in conjunction with self-preservation,
while subjects in the comparison group mentioned self-care as an ordinary
consideration in conflicts. A significant difference was found between the two
groups on mention of a problematic relationship with father, with bulimics
describing an emotionally distant relationship with father more often. Finally,
the quality of the conflicts described by bulimics tended to be more critical to
self than those described by the comparison sample.
Results were related to what Gilligan (1990) calls the biggest
challenge of the adolescent female: how to integrate inclusion of self with
inclusion of others. Disturbances in relationships within the family resulted in
the women from the bulimic sample having difficulty with this task. Two
coping styles were identified: role reversal and hostile avoidant (Salzman,
1990). The relevance of these coping styles to bulimia was discussed.
Implications for therapy were reviewed and recommendations were
made for future research. / Graduation date: 1992
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A moral development theory : a synthesis from selected moral development theories, a spiral progression model of human development, and ego-state personality theoryArmstrong, Carolyn Sue 10 October 1991 (has links)
Controversy regarding moral development research has given rise
to a proliferation of theories competing for acceptance. For all
these researchers, the work of Lawrence Kohlberg is the pivot point
for comparisons, contrasts, and discussions. Still, no theories to
date adequately describe and document a theoretically complete conception
of moral judgment and behavior. The contention in this thesis is
that Kohlberg's moral development theory should remain the base-camp
for further exploration but concepts from the past as well as new components
from other fields should be added to construct a better model
of human moral thinking and behaving. This thesis formulates a comprehensive
and more adequate moral development theory which fits
existing data. Pertinent aspects of past and present moral theories
are summarized. Theories are evaluated in light of knowledge gained
from past thinkers and recent research. Inadequacies are discussed.
New pieces from psychological personality theories are presented to
replace the normally accepted concept of a unitary ego theory. A more
realistic model of growth as a spiral development process is presented.
This spiral model allows features of the invariant stage
sequence and step-wise hierarchial development process, critical to
Piaget's cognitive development theory and to Kohlberg's justice-oriented
moral development theory, to exist while couched in a broader
growth process that encompasses the pertinent additional features of
other researchers' works. The newly constructed theory is presented.
Documented case materials and portions of counseling sessions are used
to show some adequacy-of-fit of aspects of this theory. / Graduation date: 1992
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Relationships of parental attitudes to moral development of a selected group of Greek children, age 5.0-6.0Mitsacos-Yannopoulos, Jasmin 03 June 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationships between parental attitudes and moral development of a selected group of Greek children, age 5.0 - 6.0The following instruments were used: The Georgas Intelligence Test for Children; Shoben's University of Southern California Parent Attitude Survey; and Piaget's Stories on the Moral Judgment of the Child followed by semi-structured interviews, along with pictorial representations of Piaget's stories.The subjects were fifty two males and forty-eight females enrolled in five private upper middle class kindergarten classes in the Athens area.An analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to analyze two null hypotheses. A chi-square analysis was used to test the remaining null hypothesis. Post hoc analysis, using analysis of variance on simple effects was conducted to further interpret the results. The .05 level of confidence was postulated for the rejection of the three null hypotheses.The results of this study indicated that: 1) there is no relationship between the sex and moral development of preschool children, however further statistical investigation indicated significant interactions with sex by certain variables or with sex within a story, 2) there is a relationship between parental attitudes and the moral development of preschool children, and 3) there is a relationship between intelligence scores and the moral development of preschool children.The most significant psychological/educational implication was that moral development of preschool children depends on parental attitudes which influence the child's concept of moral issues. Awareness of the child's cognitive and emotional readiness to integrate moral concepts can help promote moral judgment.
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Lawrence Kohlberg and Carol Gilligan an analysis of their moral development theories in relation to the understanding of the nature of self /Andrews, Lauren Lee. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Denver Seminary, 1995. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 101-104).
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Is a word to the wise sufficeint? : character education in public secondary schools /Urban, Scott H., January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.A.)--University of North Carolina at Wilmington, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves : [54]-56).
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Sosialisering as modus van morele vorming in die kerk /Philander, N. C. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (DTh)--Universiteit van Stellenbosch, 2008. / Bibliography. Also available via the Internet.
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THE MORAL JUDGMENT AND CONDUCT OF LEARNING DISABLED ADOLESCENT BOYS AS COMPARED TO AVERAGE ACHIEVING ADOLESCENT BOYSDerr, Alice Miriam January 1980 (has links)
The purposes of this study were to investigate how learning disabled adolescents formulate moral judgments as compared to average achieving adolescents, and to determine what relationship, if any, exists between moral judgments and moral conduct. Recent literature had suggested that social per
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Mapping the care domain : conceptualization, assessment, and relation to eating disordersHennig, Karl H. 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this dissertation was to undertake a conceptualization and empirical
"mapping" of the ethic-of-care domain - often characterized as self-referential and lacking in
rigor. The current focus is upon conventional forms of care, involving notions of moral
"goodness" as self-silencing and -sacrificial.
Employing a "super" circumplex as a prescriptive and descriptive tool, projected item
analyses were undertaken as a theoretico-structural clarification of existing scale items, along
with a provisional pool of additional items generated as part of Study 1. Based in part on
proposed circular criteria, the Conventional Care Scales (CCS) were developed and
submitted to a conjoint principal components analysis along with the battery of other
care/dependency scale items. An examination of item circular distributions, factor loadings,
alpha-contribution plots, and thematic content revealed several factors expressive of two
"faces" of conventional care, submissive and ingenuous. These two forms were shown to
have unique correlates with measures of adjustment, interpersonal competencies, other
factors of the Five-Factor Model, false-self beliefs, and reported distress in narrated accounts
of rejected care giving. Gender differences in the association between indices of adjustment
and conventional care were also found. The range of conventional care was also extended
through the development of scales reflecting other-directed and socially prescribed
dimensions of conventional care. The factor structure for the CSS was also replicated in a
second sample (Study 2). Participants for Studies 1 and 2 were composed of undergraduate
students (N = 302 in both samples) who completed a battery of questionnaires in the first
study and the CCS alone in the second study.
Anticipating future clinical directions, secondary analyses using structural equation
modelling were conducted on an existing data set (N = 92) which included measures of
conventional care and perfectionism, along with indices of psychological adjustment and
eating disordered attitudes. Results indicated that conventional care, for which there is little
research, was more predictive of adjustment and eating disordered attitudes than
perfectionism, for which there exists a large clinical literature. This research contributes to
an understanding of ways in which an ethic of care can "go awry," as well as proposes a
research platform upon which the clinical implications of morality and self-ideals can be
investigated. These findings speak to both the constraints and prescriptions that can inform a
philosophical ethic of care.
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The Neurophysiological Correlates of Children's and Adults' Judgments of Moral and Social Conventional ViolationsLahat, Ayelet 31 August 2011 (has links)
Adults and young children have been found to distinguish between moral and social conventional acts, which are considered to entail distinct domains of reasoning (e.g., Turiel 1983). Recently, research has begun to examine the neural basis of moral judgments (e.g., Greene et al., 2001), but these studies did not examine the development of neurocognitive processing of judgments in these two domains. The present study focused on detection of cognitive conflict as a neurocognitive process that distinguished judgments of moral and conventional violations. The N2 component of the ERP was examined in order to determine whether the two types of violation are associated with different neurophysiological correlates and whether they change with development. In a series of five experiments, reaction times and ERPs were recorded from 12- to 14-year-old children and undergraduates who read scenarios that had one of three possible endings: (1) moral violations, (2) conventional violations, (3) no violation (neutral acts). Participants judged whether the act was acceptable or unacceptable when a rule was assumed or removed. Results indicate that reaction times were faster for moral than conventional violations when a rule was assumed for both undergraduates and children, as well as when a rule was removed for children but not for undergraduates. ERP data indicated that adults’, but not children’s, N2 amplitudes were larger (i.e., more negative) for conventional than
iii
moral violations when a rule was assumed. Furthermore, source analysis indicated generators for the N2 in dorsomedial and ventromedial prefrontal cortices. The results suggest that judgments of conventional violations involve increased conflict detection as compared to moral violations, and these two domains are processed differently across development. The findings were explained by the idea that judgments of conventional violations are more explicitly dependant on rules, whereas judgments of moral violations are based more directly on the intrinsic negative consequences of the act.
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The Neurophysiological Correlates of Children's and Adults' Judgments of Moral and Social Conventional ViolationsLahat, Ayelet 31 August 2011 (has links)
Adults and young children have been found to distinguish between moral and social conventional acts, which are considered to entail distinct domains of reasoning (e.g., Turiel 1983). Recently, research has begun to examine the neural basis of moral judgments (e.g., Greene et al., 2001), but these studies did not examine the development of neurocognitive processing of judgments in these two domains. The present study focused on detection of cognitive conflict as a neurocognitive process that distinguished judgments of moral and conventional violations. The N2 component of the ERP was examined in order to determine whether the two types of violation are associated with different neurophysiological correlates and whether they change with development. In a series of five experiments, reaction times and ERPs were recorded from 12- to 14-year-old children and undergraduates who read scenarios that had one of three possible endings: (1) moral violations, (2) conventional violations, (3) no violation (neutral acts). Participants judged whether the act was acceptable or unacceptable when a rule was assumed or removed. Results indicate that reaction times were faster for moral than conventional violations when a rule was assumed for both undergraduates and children, as well as when a rule was removed for children but not for undergraduates. ERP data indicated that adults’, but not children’s, N2 amplitudes were larger (i.e., more negative) for conventional than
iii
moral violations when a rule was assumed. Furthermore, source analysis indicated generators for the N2 in dorsomedial and ventromedial prefrontal cortices. The results suggest that judgments of conventional violations involve increased conflict detection as compared to moral violations, and these two domains are processed differently across development. The findings were explained by the idea that judgments of conventional violations are more explicitly dependant on rules, whereas judgments of moral violations are based more directly on the intrinsic negative consequences of the act.
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