Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, Volume 51

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Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, Volume 51

Moral Motivation through the Life Span

Edited by Gustavo Carlo and Carolyn Pope Edwards

Nebraska Symposium on Motivation Series

296 pages
Illus.

Hardcover

September 2005

978-0-8032-1549-8

$50.00 Add to Cart

About the Book

Moral Motivation through the Life Span is the fifty-first volume in the Nebraska Symposium on Motivation series, the longest continuously running symposium in the field of psychology. This work focuses on moral development theory and research, an area of academic study that began early in the twentieth century but has never before been addressed by the Symposium. What is morality, such theorists ask, and what exactly makes a "moral person"?
 
The contributors to this volume are of diverse theoretical orientations and take different stances on a number of major themes: What motivates moral behavior? Are there certain universal moral values, or are such values always subjective? Does an individual's will or an individual's environment play a greater role in determining moral conduct? What influence can we attribute to spirituality? Finally, the contributors explore the practical applications of their research on moral motivation: What implications do such theories have for child-rearing or our educational system? How do we raise the next generation to be empathetic toward their fellow human beings?

Author Bio

Gustavo Carlo is a professor of developmental psychology at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln and the recipient of a distinguished research award from the American Psychological Association and the John Templeton Foundation. Carolyn Pope Edwards is Willa Cather Professor and a professor of psychology and of family and consumer sciences at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. She is the coauthor of Ngecha: A Kenyan Community in a Time of Rapid Social Change (Nebraska 2004) and the coeditor of Bambini: The Italian Approach to Infant-Toddler Care.

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