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Moral and social reasoning and perspective taking in later life: A longitudinal study.
52
Citations
22
References
1996
Year
Moral ReasoningAgingMoral PhilosophySocial PsychologyMoral IssuePsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologySocial ReasoningPerspective TakingCognitive ScienceMoral DevelopmentGeriatricsApplied Social PsychologyAdult DevelopmentSocial CognitionMoral PsychologyAge GroupLater AdulthoodOlder AdultsMedicine
In this study 27 older adults (ages 64-80) and 23 middle-aged adults (ages 35-54) were tested for moral stage, integrative complexity of social reasoning, and perspective-taking levels twice over a 4-year period. Moral reasoning stage levels did not change over time for either age group. Older adults, but not the middle-aged, showed a significant decline over time in level of moral perspective taking. Complexity of reasoning about several interpersonal social issues declined modestly in both age groups. More social-cognitive support, a higher education level, and better self-reported health were all found to be protective factors in forestalling declines in mature adults' sociocognitive reasoning, consistent with other research on cognitive measures in later life.
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