Article
Moral reasoning, cultural practices and social inequalities
Fecha
2012-08-15Registro en:
Revista Innovación Educativa no. 59
1665-2673
Autor
Turiel, Elliot
Institución
Resumen
This article addresses a set of questions regarding relations between
culture and morality. Unlike positions of moral relativism based on
varying orientations in different cultures, it is proposed that moral
development involves the construction of thinking in the moral domain
through children’s reciprocal interactions with others. Along
with the construction of moral reasoning based on understandings
of welfare, justice, and rights, children construct judgments about
conventions in the social system and areas of personal jurisdiction.
The analyses presented show that cultural comparisons require attention
to variations within cultures, commonalities between cultures,
and patterns of similarities and differences between cultures.
One seemingly common feature in most cultures is the existence
of social hierarchies and inequalities, with groups distributed in
positions of greater power and status over other groups. Research
in several cultures, including patriarchal ones, shows that
people in subordinate positions regularly challenge cultural practices
of inequality and unfair restrictions on their personal choices
and autonomy. Social opposition and resistance stem from moral
judgments by which individuals are able to reflect upon systems of
social organization and cultural practices.