This study investigated the utilitarian and emotion-related components of morality, both as a function of gender and age and in relation to hostile vs. pro-social behaviors in bullying. We presented 45 primary and 62 middle school students with different types of moral and control dilemmas to assess their acceptance of utilitarian behaviors that did or did not violate moral norms (with high or low emotional involvement) in relation to their propensity to assume hostile and/or pro-social roles. We found greater acceptance of utilitarian solutions to dilemmas in boys, older children and those inclined to take on hostile roles. An inverse association was found between utilitarian styles and pro-social roles, particularly when utilitarian thinking violated a moral norm with high emotional involvement. We discuss these results in terms of different functioning styles in typically developing children.

Belacchi, C., Farina, E. (2018). Utilitarian and emotion-related components of moral judgement: Gender and age effects and the relationship with prosocial and hostile roles in bullying. THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 15(4 - July), 438-451 [10.1080/17405629.2017.1301254].

Utilitarian and emotion-related components of moral judgement: Gender and age effects and the relationship with prosocial and hostile roles in bullying

Farina, E
2018

Abstract

This study investigated the utilitarian and emotion-related components of morality, both as a function of gender and age and in relation to hostile vs. pro-social behaviors in bullying. We presented 45 primary and 62 middle school students with different types of moral and control dilemmas to assess their acceptance of utilitarian behaviors that did or did not violate moral norms (with high or low emotional involvement) in relation to their propensity to assume hostile and/or pro-social roles. We found greater acceptance of utilitarian solutions to dilemmas in boys, older children and those inclined to take on hostile roles. An inverse association was found between utilitarian styles and pro-social roles, particularly when utilitarian thinking violated a moral norm with high emotional involvement. We discuss these results in terms of different functioning styles in typically developing children.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
bullying; moral judgment; emotion-related and cognitive components; moral dilemmas
English
2018
15
4 - July
438
451
none
Belacchi, C., Farina, E. (2018). Utilitarian and emotion-related components of moral judgement: Gender and age effects and the relationship with prosocial and hostile roles in bullying. THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 15(4 - July), 438-451 [10.1080/17405629.2017.1301254].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/148339
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