Title: Kohlbergs Theories of Moral Development
1Kohlbergs Theories of Moral Development
- HRE 4M1 Grade 12M Religion
- Chapter 10 Free to be Fully Alive
2Background
- The theory concerns itself with the reasons
behind an action, and not the action itself - Six people can do the same thing , but each of
them may do it for different reasons - People understand moral reasoning at their own
stage, from stages lower than they are, or higher
than they are - People are attracted to higher stages
- Encountering moral dillemas allows for growth
3Stages of Moral Reasoning
- LEVEL 1 (Pre-Conventional) FOCUS ON THE SELF
- Stage 1 Punishment and Obedience
- Stage 2 Personal Usefulness
- LEVEL 2 (Conventional) FOCUS ON OTHERS
- Stage 3 Conforming to the Will of the Group
- Stage 4 Authority and Social Order (Law and
Order) - LEVEL 3 (Post-Conventional) FOCUS ON PRINCIPLES
- Stage 5 Social Contract and Human Rights
- Stage 6 Universal Ethical Principles (Personal
Conscience)
4Kohlbergs Dilemma Example
- A woman was near death from a special kind of
cancer. There was one drug that the doctors
thought might save her. It was a form of radium
that a druggist in the same town had recently
discovered. The drug was expensive to make, but
the druggist was charging ten times what the drug
cost him to produce. He paid 200 for the radium
and charged 2,000 for a small dose of the drug.
The sick woman's husband, Heinz, went to everyone
he knew to borrow the money, but he could only
get together about 1,000, which is half of what
it cost. He told the druggist that his wife was
dying and asked him to sell it cheaper or let him
pay later. But the druggist said, "No, I
discovered the drug and I'm going to make money
from it." So Heinz got desperate and broke into
the man's store to steal the drug for his wife.
Should Heinz have broken into the laboratory to
steal the drug for his wife? Why or why not?
5Level 1 Pre-Conventional Level Focus on the
Self
6Stage 1 Punishment and Obedience
- This stage generally occurs from the ages of 7-11
- At this stage, children see rules as fixed and
absolute - Physical consequences determine the goodness or
badness of an act. - Avoidance of punishment is the key motivation
- The person submits to power and authority to
avoid punishment
7Stage 2 Personal Usefulness
- This stage generally occurs from the ages of 7-11
- What is right is that which satisfies ones own
needs and occasionally the needs of others. - Human relations and fairness are interpreted in a
physical and pragmatic way what is useful to
me? - You scratch my back and Ill scratch yours is
the basic mentality and motivation.
8Pre-Conventional Examples
9Level 2 Conventional Level Focus on the Group
10Stage 3 Conforming to the Will of the Group
- This stage generally occurs from the ages of
11-25 - Good behaviour is that which pleases or helps
others and gets approval from them - One conforms to standard ideas of appropriate
behaviour - One earns acceptance by being nice
- This is often referred to as the
- good boy-good girl orientation
- Behaviour is often judged
- by the intention they mean
- well
11Stage 4 Law and Order
- This stage generally begins around age 15 until
25 - One sees obedience to rules for their own sake as
a necessary to maintain order - Right behaviour consists of doing ones duty and
respecting authority - Flaws in the system are due to failure of the
individuals to obey the system
12Pre-Conventional Examples
13Level 3 Post-Conventional Level Focus on
Principles
14Stage 5 Social Contract and Human Rights
- This stage can be reached beginning around ages
21-25 - The right action is described in terms of general
values that have been agreed upon by the whole
society - Laws are justified on the basis of general
principles - One may work to change the law for the sake of
society - Right action is seen as a matter or personal
values
15Stage 6 Personal Conscience
- This stage generally begins around age 15 until
25 - Right is a decision of personal conscience in
agreement with abstract ethical principles that
apply to all persons everywhere. - Decisions are based upon universal principles of
justice, the reciprocity and equality of human
rights, and respect for the dignity of human
beings as individual persons - Choices are grounded in genuine moral interest in
the well-being of others, regardless of who or
where they are.
16Post-Conventional Examples
17The Reality
- These are natural steps
- There is no stage-skipping, but sometimes we slip
back when we are stressed - Someone can be at different levels in various
aspects of life - One can reason one way and act another way
- Some individuals become stuck in one stage not
everyone reaches mature morality - 15-20 of American adults continue to think at
the pre-conventional level ½ reach Stage 6
18Biases
- Men base moral judgement on principles of
impartial justice, fairness, and equity - Women base moral judgement on principles of
caring, nurturing and responsibility - Women experience intimacy, care and concern at an
earlier age than men - The needs of the poor must take priority over the
wants of the rich even if the resolution of the
problem for the poor has a great potential cost
for the rich