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Connections Between Theory of Mind and Sociomoral Development: New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, No. 103
Jodie A. Baird, Bryan W. Sokol
ISBN: 978-0-7879-7440-4
Paperback
96 pages
April 2004
US $29.00 add_to_cart.gif
 
Table of Contents
 
EDITORS’ NOTES (Jodie A. Baird, Bryan W. Sokol).

1. “Is” and “Ought”: Moral Judgments About the World as Understood (Cecilia Wainryb)
The author considers a framework for understanding how beliefs about the way the world is bear on moral decisions. This interplay of moral concepts and factual beliefs figures prominently in the explanation of moral diversity and in the explanation of children’s understanding and tolerance of moral diversity.

2. From Mechanical to Autonomous Agency: The Relationship Between Children’s Moral Judgments and Their Developing Theories of Mind (Bryan W. Sokol, Michael J. Chandler, Christopher Jones)
If the current gap between theories-of-mind research and the field of sociomoral development is to be successfully bridged, then greater attention must be given over to addressing how both “professional” and “folk” psychologists conceptualize human agency.

3. The Role of Mental State Understanding in the Development of Moral Cognition and Moral Action (Jodie A. Baird, Janet Wilde Astington)
The authors address developmental changes in children’s motives-based moral reasoning. Drawing on research with typically developing and behavior-disordered children, they report relations among moral cognition, mental state understanding, and real-world social behavior.

4. Altruism, Prudence, and Theory of Mind in Preschoolers (Chris Moore, Shannon Macgillivray)
The authors argue that theory of mind is not sufficient to make children act prosocially. Individual differences in the tendency to value the concerns of others likely play an important role. The distinction between the cognitive and motivational aspects of behavioral control is illustrated in a longitudinal study.

5. Bridging the Gap Between Theory of Mind and Moral Reasoning (Janet Wilde Astington)
The gap between theory of mind and moral reasoning research is more apparent than real due to the different emphases in the two fields. However, a more fundamental gap, which is the one between reasoning abilities and behavior, exists in both fields, and this requires investigation.

6. Mind and Morality (Peter H. Kahn Jr.)
This chapter examines why the fields of theory of mind and moral development have remained largely divided over the years and how they can now enrich one another.

Index.

 
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