The present paper examines the relationship between the development of moral behavior and the development of verbal regulatory processes. Relational frame theory and the distinctions among pliance, tracking, and augmenting forms of rule governance are applied to the domain of moral behavior and its development, in order to identify the specific social and verbal contingencies that are responsible for an evolving moral repertoire. It is argued that moral behavior is controlled by relational and rule-following repertoires, and that these can be arranged into a rough progression: pliance, tracking, augmenting, social concern for pliance, social concern for tracking, and social concern for augmenting. Congruence with data derived from other res...
Within relational frame theory, a distinction has been made between three types of rule-governed beh...
Modern research on social norms makes an important distinction between descriptive norms (how people...
Since the time of Aristotle, traditional ethics has imputed the morality of action to the ‘acting su...
If a grammar is taken to be a set of rules that operate over a series of representations (Chomsky, 1...
Rule-governed behavior is broadly defined as verbal antecedent stimuli that specify dependence relat...
A recent systematic review has highlighted that the terms “pliance,” “tracking,” and “augmenting” ha...
Behavior-analytic accounts of rule-adherence behavior suggest that rule-governance is a general clas...
Genuine moral disagreement exists and is widespread. To understand such disagreement, we must examin...
One of the most influential modern theories of morality, Moral Foundations Theory, proposes that mor...
Studies in the behavioral ethics and moral psychology traditions have begun to reveal the important ...
In this position paper, we provide an overview of what we regard as the most important features of t...
This longitudinal research examined a structural model of the self-regulatory mechanisms governing t...
A theoretical description for how people make moral decisions and create intentions to behave in a m...
The term rule-governed behavior (RGB) was first coined by Skinner (1966) to refer to behavior essent...
A theory is presented that highlights the narrative role of language in moral development. Two stage...
Within relational frame theory, a distinction has been made between three types of rule-governed beh...
Modern research on social norms makes an important distinction between descriptive norms (how people...
Since the time of Aristotle, traditional ethics has imputed the morality of action to the ‘acting su...
If a grammar is taken to be a set of rules that operate over a series of representations (Chomsky, 1...
Rule-governed behavior is broadly defined as verbal antecedent stimuli that specify dependence relat...
A recent systematic review has highlighted that the terms “pliance,” “tracking,” and “augmenting” ha...
Behavior-analytic accounts of rule-adherence behavior suggest that rule-governance is a general clas...
Genuine moral disagreement exists and is widespread. To understand such disagreement, we must examin...
One of the most influential modern theories of morality, Moral Foundations Theory, proposes that mor...
Studies in the behavioral ethics and moral psychology traditions have begun to reveal the important ...
In this position paper, we provide an overview of what we regard as the most important features of t...
This longitudinal research examined a structural model of the self-regulatory mechanisms governing t...
A theoretical description for how people make moral decisions and create intentions to behave in a m...
The term rule-governed behavior (RGB) was first coined by Skinner (1966) to refer to behavior essent...
A theory is presented that highlights the narrative role of language in moral development. Two stage...
Within relational frame theory, a distinction has been made between three types of rule-governed beh...
Modern research on social norms makes an important distinction between descriptive norms (how people...
Since the time of Aristotle, traditional ethics has imputed the morality of action to the ‘acting su...