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Values, Achievement, and Justice [electronic resource] : Studies in the Psychology of Deservingness / by Norman T. Feather.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextSeries: Publisher: New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1999Edition: 1st ed. 1999Description: XVI, 292 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780306471698
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 155 23
Online resources:
Contents:
and Overview -- Perceived Responsibility -- Values and Valences -- The Deservingness Model -- Achievement and Deservingness -- A Social-Cognitive Process Model of Retributive Justice -- Social Identity, Moral Character, and Retributive Justice -- Final Reflections.
Summary: When we say that a person deserves a positive or negative outcome, we are making a judgment that is influenced by a number ofvariables. We would certainly take into account whether the person was resp- siblefortheoutcomeorwhethertheoutcomecouldbeattributedtoother sources. We would also consider whether the actions that led to the positive or negative outcome were actions that we would value or - tionsthatwouldmeetwithourdisapproval.Wemightalsobeinfluenced by the person’s own positive or negative characteristics, by ourkno- edgeofwhatkinds ofgroups orsocialcategoriesthepersonbelongedto, and by whether we like or dislike the person. Information about these differentvariableshastobe consideredandintegratedin someway, and our judgment of deservingness follows that psychological process, a process that involves the cognitive-affective system. Values, Achievements, and Justice is about deservingness and about the variables that affect the judgments we make. I use the term 2dese- ingness3 although I could equally have referred to 2deservedness3 or 2desert.3 The terms are all virtually equivalent in meaning, although dictionaries may separate them by using fine distinctions. I assume that the sorts of variables I have just described will affect ourjudgments of deservingness, and I further assume that a judgment of deservingness is most likely to occur when these variables fit together in a consistent, harmonious, and balanced way.
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and Overview -- Perceived Responsibility -- Values and Valences -- The Deservingness Model -- Achievement and Deservingness -- A Social-Cognitive Process Model of Retributive Justice -- Social Identity, Moral Character, and Retributive Justice -- Final Reflections.

When we say that a person deserves a positive or negative outcome, we are making a judgment that is influenced by a number ofvariables. We would certainly take into account whether the person was resp- siblefortheoutcomeorwhethertheoutcomecouldbeattributedtoother sources. We would also consider whether the actions that led to the positive or negative outcome were actions that we would value or - tionsthatwouldmeetwithourdisapproval.Wemightalsobeinfluenced by the person’s own positive or negative characteristics, by ourkno- edgeofwhatkinds ofgroups orsocialcategoriesthepersonbelongedto, and by whether we like or dislike the person. Information about these differentvariableshastobe consideredandintegratedin someway, and our judgment of deservingness follows that psychological process, a process that involves the cognitive-affective system. Values, Achievements, and Justice is about deservingness and about the variables that affect the judgments we make. I use the term 2dese- ingness3 although I could equally have referred to 2deservedness3 or 2desert.3 The terms are all virtually equivalent in meaning, although dictionaries may separate them by using fine distinctions. I assume that the sorts of variables I have just described will affect ourjudgments of deservingness, and I further assume that a judgment of deservingness is most likely to occur when these variables fit together in a consistent, harmonious, and balanced way.

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