Deontological Coherence: A Framework for Commonsense Moral Reasoning Deontological Coherence: A Framework for Commonsense Moral Reasoning Keith J Holyoak and Derek Powell University of California, Los Angeles We review a broad range of work, primarily in cognitive and social psychology, that provides insight into the processes of moral judgment
Deontological Coherence : Psychological Bulletin We review a broad range of work, primarily in cognitive and social psychology, that provides insight into the processes of moral judgment In particular, we consider research on pragmatic reasoning about regulations and on coherence in decision making, both areas in which psychological theories have been guided by work in legal philosophy Armed with these essential prerequisites, we sketch a
Deontological coherence: A framework for commonsense moral reasoning . . . We review a broad range of work, primarily in cognitive and social psychology, that provides insight into the processes of moral judgment In particular, we consider research on pragmatic reasoning about regulations and on coherence in decision making, both areas in which psychological theories have …
Deontological coherence: A framework for - ProQuest We review a broad range of work, primarily in cognitive and social psychology, that provides insight into the processes of moral judgment In particular, we consider research on pragmatic reasoning about regulations and on coherence in decision making, both areas in which psychological theories have been guided by work in legal philosophy Armed with these essential prerequisites, we sketch a
Deontological coherence: A framework for commonsense moral reasoning. We review a broad range of work, primarily in cognitive and social psychology, that provides insight into the processes of moral judgment In particular, we consider research on pragmatic reasoning about regulations and on coherence in decision making, both areas in which psychological theories have been guided by work in legal philosophy Armed with these essential prerequisites, we sketch a
Coherence Ethics: A Universal Framework for Adaptive Moral Reasoning Abstract Ethical frameworks throughout history have struggled with fragmentation, internal contradictions, and the inability to adapt to complex, real-world decision-making Traditional models—deontology, utilitarianism, and moral relativism—fail to resolve key ethical paradoxes such as the is-ought problem, the tension between justice and mercy, and the limits of moral responsibility
(PDF) Connectionist Coherence and Moral Reasoning Iddo Landau download Download free PDF View PDF chevron_right Deontological coherence: A framework for commonsense moral reasoning Keith Holyoak Psychological bulletin, 2016 We review a broad range of work, primarily in cognitive and social psychology, that provides insight into the processes of moral judgment
Moral judgment as reasoning by constraint satisfaction May's careful examination of empirical evidence makes a compelling case against the primacy of emotion in driving moral judgments At the same time, emotion certainly is involved in moral judgments We argue that emotion interacts with beliefs, values, and moral principles through a process of coherence-based reasoning (operating at least partially below the level of conscious awareness) in
Deontological coherence: A framework for commonsense moral reasoning . . . Abstract We review a broad range of work, primarily in cognitive and social psychology, that provides insight into the processes of moral judgment In particular, we consider research on pragmatic reasoning about regulations and on coherence in decision making, both areas in which psychological theories have been guided by work in legal philosophy Armed with these essential prerequisites, we
Toward a General Framework of Biased Reasoning: Coherence-Based . . . A considerable amount of experimental research has been devoted to uncovering biased forms of reasoning Notwithstanding the richness and overall empirical soundness of the bias research, the field can be described as disjointed, incomplete, and undertheorized In this article, we seek to address this disconnect by offering “coherence-based reasoning” as a parsimonious theoretical