Fiddick Laurence
Max Planck Insititue for Human Development, Berlin, Germany.
Q J Exp Psychol A. 2004 Apr;57(3):447-74. doi: 10.1080/02724980343000332.
Deontic reasoning has been studied in two subfields of psychology: the cognitive and moral reasoning literatures. These literatures have drawn different conclusions about the nature of deontic reasoning. The consensus within the cognitive reasoning literature is that deontic reasoning is a unitary phenomenon, whereas the consensus within the moral reasoning literature is that there are different subdomains of deontic reasoning. We present evidence from a series of experiments employing the methods of both literatures suggesting that people make a systematic distinction between two types of deontic rule: social contracts and precautions. The results call into question the prevailing opinion in the cognitive reasoning literature and provide further support for both an evolutionary view of deontic reasoning and the more domain-specific perspective found in the moral reasoning literature.
认知推理文献和道德推理文献。这些文献对道义推理的本质得出了不同的结论。认知推理文献中的共识是,道义推理是一种单一的现象,而道德推理文献中的共识是,道义推理存在不同的子领域。我们通过一系列采用这两种文献方法的实验提供证据,表明人们在两种类型的道义规则之间做出了系统区分:社会契约和预防措施。这些结果对认知推理文献中的主流观点提出了质疑,并为道义推理的进化观点以及道德推理文献中更具领域特异性的观点提供了进一步支持。