We conducted the first controlled study on the effects of a philosophy class on moral justification abilities. We assigned 65 students, enrolled in non-philosophy university courses and who had never participated in moral philosophy classes, to a "moral" experimental group and a "non-moral" control group. The students in each group responded to a moral dilemma by providing an extended justification for their answer (pre-test). They then read a brief text and participated in a 75-minute class on normative ethics and argumentative logic, respectively. They answered the same dilemma immediately after the class (post-test) and a partially different dilemma one month later (follow-up). We analyzed the participants’ justifications based on six "procedural" competencies for a good moral justification: empirical competence, conceptual competence, logical coherence, sympathetic imagination, bias reduction, and openness to revision. Only in the moral group conceptual competence and logical coherence improved between the pre-test and post-test; conceptual competence also showed long-term improvement, maintaining the effect of the intervention at follow-up (although the effect decreased between post-intervention and follow-up); logical coherence was also maintained between post-intervention and follow-up. The other competencies were either weakly present or tended to decline over time. Although a single intervention may have limited effects, our study suggests that moral reflection stimulated by the teaching of basic theoretical elements of normative ethics can have a significant effect on improving moral justification abilities.

Ragionamento e giustificazione morale: uno studio empirico / Bina, F., Guma, F., Reichlin, M., Songhorian, S.. - In: SISTEMI INTELLIGENTI. - ISSN 1973-8226. - 37:3(2025), pp. 417-428. [10.1422/119081]

Ragionamento e giustificazione morale: uno studio empirico

Federico Bina
Primo
;
Francesca Guma
Secondo
;
Massimo Reichlin
Penultimo
;
Sarah Songhorian
Ultimo
2025-01-01

Abstract

We conducted the first controlled study on the effects of a philosophy class on moral justification abilities. We assigned 65 students, enrolled in non-philosophy university courses and who had never participated in moral philosophy classes, to a "moral" experimental group and a "non-moral" control group. The students in each group responded to a moral dilemma by providing an extended justification for their answer (pre-test). They then read a brief text and participated in a 75-minute class on normative ethics and argumentative logic, respectively. They answered the same dilemma immediately after the class (post-test) and a partially different dilemma one month later (follow-up). We analyzed the participants’ justifications based on six "procedural" competencies for a good moral justification: empirical competence, conceptual competence, logical coherence, sympathetic imagination, bias reduction, and openness to revision. Only in the moral group conceptual competence and logical coherence improved between the pre-test and post-test; conceptual competence also showed long-term improvement, maintaining the effect of the intervention at follow-up (although the effect decreased between post-intervention and follow-up); logical coherence was also maintained between post-intervention and follow-up. The other competencies were either weakly present or tended to decline over time. Although a single intervention may have limited effects, our study suggests that moral reflection stimulated by the teaching of basic theoretical elements of normative ethics can have a significant effect on improving moral justification abilities.
2025
Italiano
Società Editrice Il Mulino
37
3
417
428
12
Pubblicato
https://www.medra.org/servlet/MREngine?hdl=10.1422/119081
Esperti anonimi
Nazionale
Goal 4: Quality education
Moral judgment, Moral judgment, Moral justification, Moral reasoning, Moral psychology. Procedural moral enhancement
No
Ragionamento e giustificazione morale: uno studio empirico / Bina, F., Guma, F., Reichlin, M., Songhorian, S.. - In: SISTEMI INTELLIGENTI. - ISSN 1973-8226. - 37:3(2025), pp. 417-428. [10.1422/119081]
reserved
4
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Bina, Federico; Guma, Francesca; Reichlin, Massimo; Songhorian, Sarah
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
   PRIN 2017-2020 – New Challenges for Applied Ethics. The moral impact of scientific and technological advances
   MIUR-BANDO PRIN 2017
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
RAGIONAMENTO e GIUSTIFICAZIONE Sistemi Intelligenti 2025.pdf

solo gestori archivio

Tipologia: PDF editoriale (versione pubblicata dall'editore)
Licenza: Tutti i diritti riservati
Dimensione 187.59 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
187.59 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/194716
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact