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Choosing between hearts and minds: Children's understanding of moral advisors
Authors:Judith H. Danovitch  Frank C. Keil
Affiliation:1. Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine, 40 Temple St. Suite 6B, New Haven, CT 06510, United States;2. Department of Psychology, Yale University, United States
Abstract:Moral development research has often focused on the development of moral reasoning without considering children's understanding of moral advisors. We investigated how children construe sources of moral advice by examining the characteristics that children deem necessary for reasoning about moral or scientific problems. In two experiments, children in grades K, 2, and 4 were presented with dilemmas of a moral nature or scientific nature and chose between two advisors. Second and fourth graders chose advisors differentially based on their expertise, while kindergartners did not discriminate between advisors. In a third experiment, older children indicated that only certain characteristics are needed to solve moral or scientific problems, and they endorsed these characteristics differentially based on the problem to be solved. Thus, by middle childhood, children construe moral knowledge as distinct from scientific knowledge and select advisors in each area accordingly.
Keywords:Conceptual development   Moral knowledge   Scientific knowledge   Division of cognitive labor
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