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(2014) Experimental ethics, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Implicit morality
a methodological survey
Nina Strohminger , Brendan Caldwell , Daryl Cameron , Jana Schaich Borg , Walter Sinnott-Armstrong
pp. 133-156
A large hunk of research in moral psychology is devoted to self-reports, which represent the end product of a complex and diverse bundle of underlying cognitive processes.1 There is more to the moral processing, however, than what can be discerned from introspection or straightfor-ward paper-and-pencil methodologies. A complete account must include all of the processes — explicit or implicit, articulated or unspoken — that go into everyday moral responses.
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Full citation:
Strohminger, N. , Caldwell, B. , Cameron, D. , Schaich Borg, J. , Sinnott-Armstrong, W. (2014)., Implicit morality: a methodological survey, in C. Luetge, H. Rusch & M. Uhl (eds.), Experimental ethics, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 133-156.
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