Moral Self-Identity Development

 
Moral Self-Identity
 
Daniel Lapsley
Notre Dame Conference on Virtue Development
May 22, 2014
 
1
 
Overview
 
Situate moral self-identity
Ethical theory
Developmental psychology
Social cognitive accounts of “moral personality”
Chronic accessibility of moral schemas (Lapsley & Narvaez)
Centrality of morality within working self concept (Karl
Aquino)
Developmental pathways
 
2
 
Major Points
 
Moral identity reflects the importance of what we
care about
 
A moral person engages in 
strong evaluation
 
But depends on accessibility of moral identity
   (understood in social cognitive terms)
 
Moral identity can be chronically accessible or
have high centrality within working self-concept
 
Or activated or deactivated by situations
 
In my beginning is my end”
                
--
T.S. Eliot (“East Coker”)
 
There is a developmental story
 
3
Situating Moral Self-Identity
 
Greater interest in drawing tighter connection
between moral agency and personality
 
Charles Taylor
 
Being a self is inescapable from existing in a space
of moral issues”
 
Augusto Blasi
 
Elevates moral self-identity for understanding moral behavior
 
4
 
A person is more likely to follow through on what
moral duty requires if the self is constructed on
moral foundations
 
i.e., to the extent that one identifies with
morality and cares about it.
Harry Frankfurt:  “The Importance of What We
Care About”
 
5
“The Importance of What We Care About”
Persons v. Wantons
Persons care about morality
Persons reflect upon desires, forms judgments
“Second-order desires”
A person orders desires and evaluates them
And wishes to conform behavior accordingly
 
Wantons are beset by first-order desires
A wanton doe not care about desirability of his/her
desires
6
 
An individual is a person to the extent s/he
engages in 
strong evaluation
 
Make ethical assessments about first-order
desires
 
Make discriminations about what is higher or
lower; worthy or unworthy, better or worse
 
C. Taylor
 
Distinctions made against a 
horizon of significance
 
Our identity is defined by strong evaluation
 
To know who I am is a species of knowing where I stand”
                                                                     
C. Taylor (1989)
 
7
 
Moral identity is marked by 
second
order volitions 
and 
strong evaluation
 
It is defined by reference to things that
have significance to us
 
My 
identity
 is defined by the 
commitments and identifications
which provide the 
frame or horizon 
within which I can try to
determine from case to case what is good or valuable, or what
ought to be done or what I endorse or oppose”
                          
    
--
C. Taylor (1989)
 
8
The Psychology of Moral Identity
 
The moral self 
identifies with morality
 and builds
the self around moral commitments
 
Morality is 
essential, central 
and 
important
 to self
 
But not everyone builds the self on morality
define the self around other priorities
Or emphasize different aspects of morality: justice, care,
beneficence
 
Moral commitments cut to the core of who
we claim ourselves to be
 
9
 
Moral identity as a dimension of individual
differences,  i.e., “personality”
 
One has a moral identity when moral notions are
central, essential, important 
to self-understanding
 
Failure to act in a way self-consistent with moral
commitments is to risk 
self-betrayal
 
And herein the motivation for moral behavior
 
10
 
Motivation of individuals who rescued Jews during
Holocaust
 
Moral “exemplars”
 
Care exemplars
 
Moral exemplars show better identity development
 
11
 
Personality Science
 
Traits
 
Scripts, schemas, prototypes
 
“Two Disciplines”
 
Knowledge structures
Self-reflective processes
Self-regulatory processes
Schemas create and sustain patterns of individual differences
Chronically accessible schemas direct attention….
Choose schema-compatible tasks, goals, settings
Choose environments that canalize dispositional preferences
 
“…
cognitive carriers of dispositions”
 
12
Advantages of Social Cognitive Theory
 
Accounts for felt necessity of moral commitments
Exemplars “just knew”
Preconscious activation of chronically accessible schemes
 
Automaticity located on the “back-end” of development as
result of repeated experience, of instruction, intentional
coaching & socialization
 
Implicit, tacit and automatic features of moral
functioning
 
13
 
An implicit measure of the Moral Self (IAT) successfully predicted moral
action (not cheating when reporting outcome of a roll of dice)
 
An explicit measure of the Moral Self predicts performance on
hypothetical 
moral scenarios
 
Implicit measure of moral identity (IAT) predicted increases
in moral outrage but not an explicit measure
 
14
 
Reprise
Three advantages of social cognitive approach
 
1.
“Just knew”…moral clarity
 
2.
  Implicit, tacit and automaticity of moral
judgments
 
3.  Accounts for situational variability
Schema accessibility underwrites discriminative facility
in selecting situational-appropriate behavior
 
15
 
A moral person has moral categories chronically
accessible
 
Provides dispositional readiness to discern moral dimensions
of experience
 
3 Points
 
1.
 
Chronically accessible constructs at higher state
 
of activation
 
2.
 
Can be made accessible by situational priming
3.
 
Accessibility emerges from a development history
 
Dan & Darcia
 
16
 
K. Aquino
 
Moral identity stored in memory: goals, values, scripts, traits
Ss whose moral identity occupies greater centrality within self-concept
should perceive that morality is self-defining
Higher centrality = greater activation potential
But we have multiple identities
Situations can activate or prime accessibility
Situational factors might “win out” given recency of activation
 
Moral identity can be activated or deactivated with
different priming conditions;
 
Moral identity moderates influence of situational primes
 
17
 
Findings
 
Situational factors that prime moral self-
schemas increases its accessibility
 
Effect of priming especially strong on Ss for
whom centrality is low
 
Current accessibility related to positive
moral intentions and behaviors
 
Moderates influence of situational primes
on morally-questionable behavior
 
18
 
Individuals with strong moral identity centrality...
 
Report stronger moral obligation to help and share resources
with an out-group  (Reed & Aquino, 2003)
 
Prefer to donate personal time for charitable causes vs.
just giving money (Reed, Aquino & Levy, 2007)
 
Neutralize effectiveness of moral disengagement
strategies (Aquino et al., 2007)
 
Includes more people in “circle of moral regard” (Hardy et
al., 2010)
Are more empathic (Detert et al., 2008)
Show greater “moral attentiveness” (Reynolds, 2008)
Less aggressive  (Barriga et al., 2001)
 
19
The Developmental Challenge
 
What developmental experiences lead to
chronically accessible moral schemas?
 
Or to the centrality of morality in the
working self-concept?
 
How do we get to “
caring about morality”
as a “second-order desire?”
 
20
 
Darcia & Dan
“Moral “chronicity” built on foundation of
generalized “event representations”
 
Event representations as “basic building blocks” of
cognitive development
 
Are elaborated in 
dialogues with caregivers 
who help
children review and consolidate memories in script-like
fashion
 
Event representations as the 
building blocks of the moral
personality
…social cognitive foundation of character
 
…the social cognitive foundation of character
 
21
 
At some point specific episodic memories must be
integrated into a narrative form that references a self
whose story it is,
 
The key characterological turn of significance
:
 how early social cognitive units are transformed
into 
autobiographical memory
Early social
cognitive units
 
(Scripts, episodic
memory, generalized
event representations)
Autobiographical
memory
(a social construction)
 
22
 
Parental interrogatives
 
What happened when you pushed your sister?”
“What should you do next?”
 
Are a scaffold that helps children structure events in a
narrative fashion
 
And provides, as part of the self-narrative, action-guiding
scripts
“I say I’m sorry”  “I share with him”
 
That become over-learned, routine, habitual, automatic.
Parents help children identify morally relevant features of
their experience and encourage formation of social
cognitive schemas that are chronically accessible.
 
23
What is the developmental source of moral desires?
 
 
G. Kochanksa
 
A strong mutually responsive orientation (MRO) orients
the child to be receptive to parental influence
 
Committed compliance to norms & values of
attachment figure
 
Motivates moral internalization
Secure
Attachment
Committed
Compliance
Moral
Internalization
 
24
Children with a strong history of committed
compliance come to view themselves as embracing
the parent’s values and rules. Such a moral self, in turn,
comes to serve as the regulator of future moral conduct
and, more generally, of early morality”
                                
--
Kochanska (2002,p. 340)
Wholehearted
commitment
(Blasian moral identity)
Committed compliance
(MRO)
25
 
 
Longitudinal assessment: 25 mos., 38mos., 52 mos., 67 mos. & 80
mos.
 
Two, 2-3 hour laboratory session, one with each parent
At 38 months, one home and one lab (with each parent)
 
Child’s internalization of each parent’s rules and empathy towards
parents’ distress observed in scripted paradigms at 25mo., 38mo. &
52 mos.
 
Moral self assessed with “puppet interview”
 
Adaptive, competent, prosocial and antisocial behavior rated by
parents & teachers
 
26
 
Moral Self Puppet Assessment
 
Two puppets anchor opposite ends of 31 items
 
The items pertain to dimensions of early conscience (e.g.,
internalization of rules, empathy, apology, etc)
 
Puppet 1
:
“When I break something, I try to hide it so no one  finds out.”
 
Puppet 2:
When I break something, I tell someone right away.”
 
Then the child is asked:  “
What about you?  Do you try to hide
something that you broke or do you tell someone right away?”
 
 
27
Children who as
 toddlers &
preschooler
s had strong
history of 
internalized “out-of-
sight” compliance  
with
parents’ rules
Were competent,
engaged, prosocial
with few antisocial
behavioral problems
at 
early school age
Strong history of 
empathic
responding
 at
toddlers/preschool
Psychosocial
competence at early
school age
 
What mechanism accounts for this beneficial effect?
 
The Moral Self
 
Children’s moral self robustly predicted future competent behavior
 
Children at 67 mos. who were “highly moral” were rated at 80 mos. as highly
competent, prosocial and having few antisocial problems
28
 
29
 
30
 
How does the moral self execute its inner guidance role?
 
Mechanisms not completely clear
 
Kochanka suggests
 
avoidance of cognitive dissonance
 
anticipation of guilty feelings,
 
automatic regulation due to high
accessibility of moral schemas
 
31
 
Major Points
 
Moral identity reflects the importance of what we
care about
 
A moral person engages in 
strong evaluation
 
But depends on accessibility of moral identity
   (understood in social cognitive terms)
 
Moral identity can be chronically accessible or
have high centrality within working self-concept
 
Or activated or deactivated by situations
 
In the end is my beginning”
                
--
T.S. Eliot (“East Coker”)
 
There is a developmental story
 
32
 
33
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Situating moral self-identity within ethical theory and developmental psychology, this overview explores the centrality of morality within the self-concept. It discusses the chronic accessibility of moral schemas, the importance of strong evaluation in moral behavior, and the connection between moral agency and personality. Emphasizing the significance of what individuals care about, the discourse delves into the distinction between persons and wantons based on their engagement in strong evaluation.

  • Moral Self-Identity
  • Ethical Theory
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Moral Behavior
  • Personality

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  1. Moral Self-Identity Daniel Lapsley Notre Dame Conference on Virtue Development 1 May 22, 2014 www.nd.edu/~dlapsle1/Lab

  2. Overview 2 Situate moral self-identity Ethical theory Developmental psychology Social cognitive accounts of moral personality Chronic accessibility of moral schemas (Lapsley & Narvaez) Centrality of morality within working self concept (Karl Aquino) Developmental pathways

  3. Major Points In my beginning is my end --T.S. Eliot ( East Coker ) 3 Moral identity reflects the importance of what we care about A moral person engages in strong evaluation But depends on accessibility of moral identity (understood in social cognitive terms) Moral identity can be chronically accessible or have high centrality within working self-concept Or activated or deactivated by situations There is a developmental story

  4. Situating Moral Self-Identity 4 Greater interest in drawing tighter connection between moral agency and personality Charles Taylor Being a self is inescapable from existing in a space of moral issues Augusto Blasi Elevates moral self-identity for understanding moral behavior

  5. 5 A person is more likely to follow through on what moral duty requires if the self is constructed on moral foundations i.e., to the extent that one identifies with morality and cares about it. Harry Frankfurt: The Importance of What We Care About

  6. The Importance of What We Care About 6 Persons v. Wantons Persons care about morality Persons reflect upon desires, forms judgments Second-order desires A person orders desires and evaluates them And wishes to conform behavior accordingly Wantons are beset by first-order desires A wanton doe not care about desirability of his/her desires

  7. An individual is a person to the extent s/he engages in strong evaluation 7 Make ethical assessments about first-order desires Make discriminations about what is higher or lower; worthy or unworthy, better or worse C. Taylor Distinctions made against a horizon of significance Our identity is defined by strong evaluation To know who I am is a species of knowing where I stand C. Taylor (1989)

  8. 8 Moral identity is marked by second order volitions and strong evaluation It is defined by reference to things that have significance to us My identity is defined by the commitments and identifications which provide the frame or horizon within which I can try to determine from case to case what is good or valuable, or what ought to be done or what I endorse or oppose --C. Taylor (1989)

  9. The Psychology of Moral Identity 9 The moral self identifies with morality and builds the self around moral commitments Moral commitments cut to the core of who we claim ourselves to be Morality is essential, central and important to self But not everyone builds the self on morality define the self around other priorities Or emphasize different aspects of morality: justice, care, beneficence

  10. Moral identity as a dimension of individual differences, i.e., personality 10 One has a moral identity when moral notions are central, essential, important to self-understanding Failure to act in a way self-consistent with moral commitments is to risk self-betrayal And herein the motivation for moral behavior

  11. Motivation of individuals who rescued Jews during Holocaust 11 Moral exemplars Care exemplars Moral exemplars show better identity development

  12. Personality Science 12 Two Disciplines Traits Scripts, schemas, prototypes Knowledge structures Self-reflective processes Self-regulatory processes Schemas create and sustain patterns of individual differences Chronically accessible schemas direct attention . Choose schema-compatible tasks, goals, settings Choose environments that canalize dispositional preferences cognitive carriers of dispositions

  13. Advantages of Social Cognitive Theory 13 Accounts for felt necessity of moral commitments Exemplars just knew Preconscious activation of chronically accessible schemes Implicit, tacit and automatic features of moral functioning Automaticity located on the back-end of development as result of repeated experience, of instruction, intentional coaching & socialization

  14. 14 An implicit measure of the Moral Self (IAT) successfully predicted moral action (not cheating when reporting outcome of a roll of dice) An explicit measure of the Moral Self predicts performance on hypothetical moral scenarios Implicit measure of moral identity (IAT) predicted increases in moral outrage but not an explicit measure

  15. Reprise 15 Three advantages of social cognitive approach 1. Just knew moral clarity 2. Implicit, tacit and automaticity of moral judgments 3. Accounts for situational variability Schema accessibility underwrites discriminative facility in selecting situational-appropriate behavior

  16. 16 Dan & Darcia A moral person has moral categories chronically accessible Provides dispositional readiness to discern moral dimensions of experience 3 Points 1. Chronically accessible constructs at higher state of activation 2. Can be made accessible by situational priming 3. Accessibility emerges from a development history

  17. 17 K. Aquino Moral identity stored in memory: goals, values, scripts, traits Ss whose moral identity occupies greater centrality within self-concept should perceive that morality is self-defining Higher centrality = greater activation potential But we have multiple identities Situations can activate or prime accessibility Situational factors might win out given recency of activation Moral identity can be activated or deactivated with different priming conditions; Moral identity moderates influence of situational primes

  18. Findings 18 Situational factors that prime moral self- schemas increases its accessibility Effect of priming especially strong on Ss for whom centrality is low Current accessibility related to positive moral intentions and behaviors Moderates influence of situational primes on morally-questionable behavior

  19. Individuals with strong moral identity centrality... 19 Report stronger moral obligation to help and share resources with an out-group (Reed & Aquino, 2003) Prefer to donate personal time for charitable causes vs. just giving money (Reed, Aquino & Levy, 2007) Neutralize effectiveness of moral disengagement strategies (Aquino et al., 2007) Includes more people in circle of moral regard (Hardy et al., 2010) Are more empathic (Detert et al., 2008) Show greater moral attentiveness (Reynolds, 2008) Less aggressive (Barriga et al., 2001)

  20. The Developmental Challenge 20 What developmental experiences lead to chronically accessible moral schemas? Or to the centrality of morality in the working self-concept? How do we get to caring about morality as a second-order desire?

  21. 21 Moral chronicity built on foundation of generalized event representations Event representations as basic building blocks of cognitive development Darcia & Dan Are elaborated in dialogues with caregivers who help children review and consolidate memories in script-like fashion Event representations as the building blocks of the moral personality social cognitive foundation of character the social cognitive foundation of character

  22. The key characterological turn of significance: how early social cognitive units are transformed into autobiographical memory 22 Early social cognitive units Autobiographical memory (a social construction) (Scripts, episodic memory, generalized event representations) At some point specific episodic memories must be integrated into a narrative form that references a self whose story it is,

  23. Parental interrogatives 23 What happened when you pushed your sister? What should you do next? Are a scaffold that helps children structure events in a narrative fashion And provides, as part of the self-narrative, action-guiding scripts I say I m sorry I share with him That become over-learned, routine, habitual, automatic. Parents help children identify morally relevant features of their experience and encourage formation of social cognitive schemas that are chronically accessible.

  24. What is the developmental source of moral desires? 24 A strong mutually responsive orientation (MRO) orients the child to be receptive to parental influence G. Kochanksa Committed compliance to norms & values of attachment figure Motivates moral internalization Committed Compliance Moral Secure Attachment Internalization

  25. Children with a strong history of committed compliance come to view themselves as embracing the parent s values and rules. Such a moral self, in turn, comes to serve as the regulator of future moral conduct and, more generally, of early morality --Kochanska (2002,p. 340) 25 Wholehearted commitment (Blasian moral identity) Committed compliance (MRO)

  26. 26 Longitudinal assessment: 25 mos., 38mos., 52 mos., 67 mos. & 80 mos. Two, 2-3 hour laboratory session, one with each parent At 38 months, one home and one lab (with each parent) Child s internalization of each parent s rules and empathy towards parents distress observed in scripted paradigms at 25mo., 38mo. & 52 mos. Moral self assessed with puppet interview Adaptive, competent, prosocial and antisocial behavior rated by parents & teachers

  27. Moral Self Puppet Assessment 27 Two puppets anchor opposite ends of 31 items The items pertain to dimensions of early conscience (e.g., internalization of rules, empathy, apology, etc) Puppet 1: When I break something, I try to hide it so no one finds out. Puppet 2: When I break something, I tell someone right away. Then the child is asked: What about you? Do you try to hide something that you broke or do you tell someone right away?

  28. Children who as toddlers & preschoolers had strong history of internalized out-of- sight compliance with parents rules Were competent, engaged, prosocial with few antisocial behavioral problems at early school age 28 Strong history of empathic responding at toddlers/preschool Psychosocial competence at early school age What mechanism accounts for this beneficial effect? The Moral Self Children s moral self robustly predicted future competent behavior Children at 67 mos. who were highly moral were rated at 80 mos. as highly competent, prosocial and having few antisocial problems

  29. 29

  30. 30

  31. How does the moral self execute its inner guidance role? 31 Mechanisms not completely clear Kochanka suggests avoidance of cognitive dissonance anticipation of guilty feelings, automatic regulation due to high accessibility of moral schemas

  32. Major Points In the end is my beginning --T.S. Eliot ( East Coker ) 32 Moral identity reflects the importance of what we care about A moral person engages in strong evaluation But depends on accessibility of moral identity (understood in social cognitive terms) Moral identity can be chronically accessible or have high centrality within working self-concept Or activated or deactivated by situations There is a developmental story

  33. 33

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