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27 February, 10:04

At which of Lawrence Kohlberg's level of morality do people follow unvarying rules based on rewards and punishment?

a. Preconventional

b. Conventional

c ... Postconventional

d. Unconventional

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Answers (1)
  1. 27 February, 12:52
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    The best answer to the question: At which of Lawrence Kohlberg's level of morality do people follow unvarying rules based on rewards and punishment, would be, A: pre-conventional.

    Explanation:

    Just like Jean Piaget studied the psychological development of the human mind and its stages, Kohlberg, building from Piaget's theory began to study and analyze how moral reasoning, and ethical behavior, originates and evolves in human beings. Thus, in 1958 he presented his Stages of Moral Development theory in which a person's process of reasoning right and wrong, and respondid morally correctly to different situations, was frameworked. In total, the theory proposes six stages of moral reasoning, four main stages and a series of substages: pre-conventional, conventional, post-conventional and unconventional are the four main. In the case presented in the question, a person whose moral reasoning depends on rewards and punishment is, according to the theory, still in the pre-conventional stage.
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