Title of article
The Intelligence of the Moral Intuitions: Comment on Haidt (2001)
Author/Authors
Pizarro، David A. نويسنده , , Bloom، Paul نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-192
From page
193
To page
0
Abstract
The social intuitionist model (J. Haidt, 2001) posits that fast and automatic intuitions are the primary source of moral judgments. Conscious deliberations play little causal role; they are used mostly to construct post hoc justifications for judgments that have already occurred. In this article, the authors present evidence that fast and automatic moral intuitions are actually shaped and informed by prior reasoning. More generally, there is considerable evidence from outside the laboratory that people actively engage in reasoning when faced with real-world moral dilemmas. Together, these facts limit the strong claims of the social intuitionist model concerning the irrelevance of conscious deliberation.
Keywords
Inventory policy , Continuous price change , High-tech industries
Journal title
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW
Record number
81923
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