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Children's changing understanding of wicked desires: From objective to subjective and moral
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1996
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Moral PhilosophySocial PsychologyMoral IssueEducationMoral ClimatePsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyWicked DesiresCallous Unemotional TraitsCognitive DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentMoral EmotionChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesMoral DevelopmentMoral UnderstandingMoral PsychologyChild DevelopmentMoral PracticeAdolescent CognitionMoral NormsEmotional DevelopmentEmotionFrom Objective
Previous work makes two conflicting claims about children's developing judgments of the emotions of an actor committing a desired but immoral act: children's judgments change (1) from sad to happy, as they come to appreciate desire as a subjective mental state, or (2) from happy to sad, as children acknowledge the role of moral values in emotion. In three experiments designed to explain this conflict, 3–10‐year‐olds judged emotions of actors committing neutral and immoral acts. Experiment 1 rules out procedural differences as an explanation of conflicting findings. Experiment 2 shows an age change from sad, to happy, to sad (remorseful), integrating the conflicting claims. Experiment 3 shows that 5‐ but not 3‐year‐olds can judge ill‐doers pleased with their success or remorseful at their wrongdoing, depending on the salience of moral issues. We discuss the roles of cognitive development, moral understanding and moral climate in influencing children's understanding of desire and moral emotion.