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RBDT: A Computerized Task System based in Transposition for the Continuous Analysis of Relational Behavior Dynamics in Humans
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A relational developmental systems approach to moral development.

Jeremy I M Carpendale1, Stuart I Hammond, Sherrie Atwood

  • 1Department of Psychology Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada. jcarpend@sfu.ca

Advances in Child Development and Behavior
|July 20, 2013
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study critiques innate morality claims, proposing a relational developmental systems view. Biology shapes the developmental system for moral interaction and thinking, rather than dictating innate moral traits.

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Area of Science:

  • Developmental Psychology
  • Evolutionary Psychology
  • Moral Philosophy

Background:

  • Morality and cooperation are fundamental to human societies.
  • Psychological explanations for moral development and cooperation often incorporate biological and evolutionary perspectives.
  • Recent theories propose innate aspects of human morality.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To review and critique nativist claims regarding innate morality.
  • To present an alternative relational developmental systems view of moral development.
  • To redefine the role of biology in moral development.

Main Methods:

  • Critical review of existing nativist theories on morality.
  • Theoretical development of a relational developmental systems framework.
  • Analysis of the interplay between biology, interaction, and cognition in moral development.

Main Results:

  • Nativist assumptions about innate morality are challenged.
  • A relational developmental systems view offers an alternative framework.
  • Biology's role is framed as establishing the developmental system for moral emergence.

Conclusions:

  • Moral development is best understood through a relational systems lens, not solely through innate predispositions.
  • Biology provides the foundation for the developmental system where moral interactions and cognition emerge.
  • This perspective emphasizes the dynamic interplay of factors in shaping morality.