منابع مشابه
Making it moral: Merely labeling an attitude as moral increases its strength
Article history: Received 30 September 2015 Revised 15 March 2016 Accepted 20 April 2016 Available online 27 April 2016 Prior research has shown that self-reportedmoral bases of people's attitudes predict a range of important consequences, including attitude-relevant behavior and resistance in the face of social influence. Although previous studies typically rely on self-report measures of such...
متن کاملFunctional Morals: Attitude Functions and Moral Reasoning
Functional theories of attitudes address why people hold attitudes. The current study had two main goals: to extend the study of attitude functions, and to relate these functions to moral development. One hundred seventy-four participants filled out a revision of Herek's (1987) Attitude Functions Inventory (AFI) and a short form of Rest's (1979) Defining Issues Test (DIT). Factor analysis on th...
متن کاملConsumerism: a threat to health?
Tara Latimer et al. recently stirred up the debate on health consumerism, so far seen as the promotion of patients’ autonomy, and aimed at improving patients’ choices about their own health. These authors explain that health consumerism was turned into an instrument that, although wearing the clothes of patient-centred care, ‘reflects a philosophy of libertarianism rather than a philosophy of p...
متن کاملHatred as a Moral and Ethical Conception in Russian Society
The present paper deals with the national specifics of the assessment aspect in the meaning of the words. A modern scientific paradigm considers the language as a cognitive tool of understanding the world and keeping and representing people’s experience and values which reflect the people’s vision of the world (“the world picture). Usually linguistics understands the language ...
متن کاملMaldynia as a moral judgment?
Lippe rejected out of hand the idea advanced by Morris [5] that pain was a pluralistic concept. Rather, he asserted “the biomedical basis of maldynia.” In Lippe’s medicocentric view of pain, “maldynia” was neither a symptom nor a syndrome but an “illness with endogenous and exogenous components.” Thus defined, “eudynia” becomes a teleologically beneficial mechanism, whereas “maldynia” is “usele...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Studia Theologica - Nordic Journal of Theology
سال: 2020
ISSN: 0039-338X,1502-7791
DOI: 10.1080/0039338x.2020.1751278