Moral Motivation beyond Moral Resolve

In Disorientation and Moral Life. New York: Oxford University Press USA (2016)
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Abstract

This chapter introduces the concept of moral resolve: when a person acts on the basis of a moral judgment about what to do and how to do it, and with feelings of confidence about the action, herself as agent, or both, she acts with moral resolve. The assumption that moral resolve is the best or only evidence of successful moral motivation has been dominant in moral psychology and in philosophical and empirical ethics, including in accounts of moral development, dual-systems theories of moral judgment, and accounts of ambivalence. Taking grief as a case study, the chapter offers an account of how experiences can have morally significant effects without generating moral resolve. This account clears the way for understanding how experiences like disorientations may be morally productive, even when they fail to generate, or directly compromise, moral resolve.

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Ami Harbin
Oakland University

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