http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kohlberg%2 ... evelopment
Kohlberg divides the moral development into 6 stages (grouped by two into three levels). The first level (pre-conventional) covers the following stages:
Emphasis by me (doesn't that fit a certain position in the other thread rather well?).In stage one, individuals focus on the direct consequences that their actions will have for themselves. For example, an action is perceived as morally wrong if the person who commits it gets punished. In addition, there is no recognition that others' points of view are any different from one's own view. This stage may be viewed as a kind of authoritarianism.
Stage two espouses the what's in it for me position, right behavior being defined by what is in one's own best interest. Stage two reasoning shows a limited interest in the needs of others, but only to a point where it might further one's own interests, such as "you scratch my back, and I'll scratch yours." In stage two concern for others is not based on loyalty or intrinsic respect. Lacking a perspective of society in the pre-conventional level, this should not be confused with social contract (stage five), as all actions are performed to serve one's own needs or interests. For the stage two theorist, the perspective of the world is often seen as morally relative.
The next level (conventional, which again includes 2 stages) revolves largely around filling social roles, the importance of intentions, and following laws, dictums and social conventions that already exist out of a sense of duty or obligation (Fundamentalism is included as an example). The last level (post-conventional, covering the last 2 stages) covers morals based on a kind of social contract, that can/should be imprved if necessary; i.e. conventions are exmained and questioned according to abstract reasoning and using universal ethical principles. (The wikipedia article probably explains it better, I just didn't want to quote too much stuff here. So better read and quote that if you disagree).
Personally I intuitively find that model to work well in describing and explaining the moral outlook of many of the people I argued with. Especially the part about moving between stages, which happens according to the theory when facing moral dillemas, that cannot be satisfactorily solved at the current level (provided that the actor also acquired increased competence in both psychologically and socially balancing conflicting value-claims).
What are your opinions on Kohlberg's model?
What was new to me, was the stuff in the criticism part:
Which I found... just odd (I am male - so is that suppoed to be the reason for that?). A concept of tribalism is supposed to be a better concept for morals and ethics, than justice? Anybody here agreeing with that, or care (no pun intended) to help me understand it better?One criticism of Kohlberg's theory is that it emphasizes justice to the exclusion of other values. [...] His theory was initially developed based on empirical research using only male participants; Gilligan argued that it did not adequately describe the concerns of women. She developed an alternative theory of moral reasoning that is based on the ethics of caring [more].
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women have traditionally been taught a different kind of moral outlook that emphasizes solidarity, community, and caring about one's special relationships.
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The justice view of morality focuses on doing the right thing even if it requires personal cost or sacrificing the interest of those to whom one is close. The care view would instead say that we can and should put the interests of those who are close to us above the interests of complete strangers, and that we should cultivate our natural capacity to care for others and ourselves.