Moral selves, evil selves : the social psychology of conscience
"People have strong moral beliefs about right and wrong, yet commonly act contrary to those beliefs. Most of us, at some time or another, have crossed a moral line and yet still view ourselves as moral and have a clean conscience. From intimate relationships to national politics, we define ourselves in large part by how we - and our friends, family, and members of our social groups - draw moral lines around our actions, thoughts, and intentions. While philosophers have weighed in on these issues for thousands of years, social scientists often underplay social life's moral dimension. Moral Selves, Evil Selves highlights our individual sense of moral coherence and develops a theory of the development and maintenance of this sense in an ambiguous and complicated social world. By conceptualizing a social psychology of conscience, this book explains how we can properly include individual and societal notions of morality into understanding the self across time and situation."--Jacket
x, 269 pages ; 22 cm
9780230603950, 0230603955
156831922
Building a social psychology of conscience
Moving parts
Evolution, society, and conscience : social influences on morality
Processes of conscience : how the moral mind works
How situations subvert conscience
Us and them : shifting moral provinces
Conscience in individual functioning : self-deception and moral self-biases
Conscience and moral horizons
Moral ambiguity of personhood
Possibility of morality