Week 7 HOW IS MORAL CHARACTER DEVELOPED STAGES OF MORAL DEVELOPMENT
Week 7 HOW IS MORAL CHARACTER DEVELOPED STAGES OF MORAL DEVELOPMENT
Week 7 HOW IS MORAL CHARACTER DEVELOPED STAGES OF MORAL DEVELOPMENT
Intended Learning Outcomes: At the end of this chapter, the students are expected to:
• It implies that as humans grow older and become more experience, our grasp
of moral right and wrong also develops.
• “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a
habit.”
• Aristotle believed that many things were needed for optimal moral
development, but one of the most important was a role model or exemplar that
one can imitate, cultivating morally appropriate habits that become moral
virtues over time.
• To become virtuous we should acquire the right sort of habits and desires
in childhood; but more generally to become virtuous, we must do virtuous acts.
• As Aristotle puts it, “We become builders…by building, and we become harpists
by playing the harp. Similarly, then, we become just by doing just actions,
temperate by doing temperate actions, brave by doing brave actions”
(Nicomachean Ethics 1103b). And we do this in part by emulating a moral
exemplar, by observing how one lives and then seeking to do likewise.
• For an action to be fully virtuous, it is not just that the act has particular qualities,
but also that the agent who performs the act does as well. One must know that
he/she is doing the virtuous action and must decide for to do it, This, must be
done from a stable character (“a firm and unchanging state”). The latter two
conditions can be achieved, according to Aristotle, by frequently performing
virtuous actions, in imitation of some moral exemplar.
• In order to apply this model, we must first identify an area of life where we’d
like to see some moral development occur, and then we must take intentional
and concrete steps to cultivate that character trait. For example, if I think I
lack generosity, then I should plan for and carry out a series of generous
actions, perhaps even committing myself to some cause over an extended
period of time, giving both of my time and money. If Aristotle is right, as I do
this over time generosity will become second nature to me; it will become a
habit, and I will become a generous person.
Ethics
Page 2 of 3
Module
USMKCC-COL-F-050
Only 10-15% are capable of the kind of abstract thinking necessary for
stage 5 or 6 (post-conventional morality). That is to say, most people take
their moral views from those around them and only a minority think through
ethical principles for themselves.
Stage 6. Universal Principles. People at this stage have developed their own
set of moral guidelines which may or may not fit the law. The principles apply
to everyone.
E.g., human rights, justice, and equality. The person will be prepared to
act to defend these principles even if it means going against the rest of society
in the process and having to pay the consequences of disapproval and or
imprisonment. Kohlberg doubted few people reached this stage.
Ethics
Page 3 of 3
Module
USMKCC-COL-F-050