moral conversion
{{Short description|Adoption of new moral standards}}
In philosophy, moral conversion is an existential change in the person, who is perceived as the moral agent adopting new moral standards (or mores) in a process of internal transformation. Moral conversion is a relatively rare event in a person's normal development. It involves a decision that is both conscious and existentialist (i.e. based on critical questioning).{{sfn|Mac Laughlin|2008|p=194}} Moral conversion is based on the internalist view of morality.{{sfn|Mac Laughlin|2008|p=7}}
As an existential event
The process of moral conversion was described by Lawrence Kohlberg of the University of Chicago, who developed the so-called Lawrence Kohlberg's stages of moral development. Six classes of moral conversion were identified, based on progressively higher and higher levels of moral reasoning, beginning with the preconventional level of a child, and concluding with the postconventional (or autonomous) level of an adult aware of ethical principles guiding universally moral behaviour.{{sfn|Mac Laughlin|2008|p=203}}
Notably, the notion of moral conversion has been distinguished from the theory of moral development per se, by Walter E. Conn (of Villanova University) and John C. Gibbs (of the Ohio State University).{{sfn|Mac Laughlin|2008|p=205}} Moral conversion, according to Conn and Gibbs, involves critical questioning and therefore differs from any spontaneous moral development (Kohlberg). It results in the setting forth of the "self-chosen values" (Conn), which bring the existential dimension to the transforming process.{{sfn|Mac Laughlin|2008|p=219–224}}
Alfredo J. Mac Laughlin of St. Ambrose University defines moral conversion by the frequent occurrence of the "{{nobreak|sharp-turn}} conversions" resulting from the presence of free will, which differ from the natural/spontaneous development taking place in incremental stages (Kohlberg).{{sfn|Mac Laughlin|2008|p=234}} The most significant aspect of moral conversion is the withdrawal from the moral convictions of the past, which is based on "critical self-appropriation" or the critical discovery of oneself.{{sfn|Mac Laughlin|2008|p=250}} It depends on the sense of authenticity beyond the possibility of predictions.{{sfn|Mac Laughlin|2008|p=253}}
As self-transcendence
Bernard Lonergan explains that moral conversion is not moral perfection. It is the "withdrawal from self-enclosure" or the shift from personal satisfaction criterion to values that transcend oneself (or one's own group interests). Moral conversion, according to Lonergan, is one of three different types of conversion along with the intellectual and the religious conversion.{{sfn|Conn|Wolski Conn|1982}} From a causal point of view, it is the difference between varying levels of consciousness leading to a higher sense of responsibility for the world.{{sfn|Doran|2011|p=13–18}}
See also
Notes
{{Reflist}}
References
- {{citation | last=Mac Laughlin | first=Alfredo J. | year=2008 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SYcUY6on7nAC&pg=PA7 | title=Conversion: The Etymological Context | work=Narratives of Hope: A Philosophical Study of Moral Conversion | access-date=October 6, 2012 | location=Loyola University | pages=476 | isbn=978-0549840107}}
- {{citation | last=Doran | first=Robert M. | year=2011 | url=http://www.lonerganresource.com/pdf/lectures/What%20Does%20Bernard%20Lonergan%20Mean%20by%20Conversion.pdf | title=Moral Conversion from and to | publisher=University of Toronto Press | work=What Does Bernard Lonergan Mean by ‘Conversion’? | access-date=October 7, 2012 | format=PDF file, direct download 61.8 KB | pages=20 }}
- {{citation | last1=Conn | first1=Walter E. | last2=Wolski Conn | first2=Joann | year=1982 | url=http://www.spiritualitytoday.org/spir2day/823442conn.html | title=Beyond Self-satisfaction | journal=Spirituality Today | volume=34 | issue=4 | id=Conversion as Self-Transcendence Exemplified in the Life of St. Thérèse of Lisieux | name-list-style=amp | access-date=October 9, 2012 | pages=303–311 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010121125400/http://www.spiritualitytoday.org/spir2day/823442conn.html | archive-date=January 21, 2001 | url-status=dead }}