The ABC of moral development: an attachment approach to moral judgment.

Front Psychol

Department of Hermeneutics and Cultural Studies, Bar-Ilan University Ramat-Gan, Israel.

Published: January 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The development of moral judgment in infants is complex and not fully understood due to limited research on its causes and contributing factors.
  • Emerging studies in infant research and moral psychology suggest that early interactions with caregivers help infants form an internal representation of moral rules.
  • The attachment model proposes that there is a universal moral structure present in all moral judgments, which has implications for our understanding of innate morality and how moral situations are represented.

Article Abstract

As with other cognitive faculties, the etiology of moral judgment and its connection to early development is complex. Because research is limited, the causative and contributory factors to the development of moral judgment in preverbal infants are unclear. However, evidence is emerging from studies within both infant research and moral psychology that may contribute to our understanding of the early development of moral judgments. Though its finding are preliminary, this proposed paradigm synthesizes these findings to generate an overarching, model of the process that appears to contribute to the development of moral judgment in the first year of life. I will propose that through early interactions with the caregiver, the child acquires an internal representation of a system of rules that determine how right/wrong judgments are to be construed, used, and understood. By breaking moral situations down into their defining features, the attachment model of moral judgment outlines a framework for a universal moral faculty based on a universal, innate, deep structure that appears uniformly in the structure of almost all moral judgments regardless of their content. The implications of the model for our understanding of innateness, universal morality, and the representations of moral situations are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3901400PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00006DOI Listing

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