Judgments of Responsibility

A Foundation for a Theory of Social Conduct

Bernard Weiner

Hardcover
Hardcover
April 14, 1995
ISBN 9780898628432
Price: $55.00
301 Pages
Size: 6" x 9"
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Presenting a general theory of social motivation, this compelling work integrates research on achievement evaluation, stigmatization, helping behavior, aggression, and impression management. Bernard Weiner examines how responsibility inferences are reached, the manner in which such judgments affect emotions, and the role that “cold” judgments of responsibility versus “hot” feelings, such as anger, play in producing both pro- and antisocial behaviors. Ideal for students as well as researchers and mental health practitioners, the book includes experiments for the reader to complete that illustrate the main points of the text.

“We pronounce the book good, judge it innocent of poor scholarship, and sentence it to having a long impact on research and theory on interpersonal judgment....This book is a significant read with enormous strengths and a provocative, testable point of view. It presents an important perspective that adds emotional and moral elements into our more cognitive models for judgments of others....The text is appropriate both for undergraduates and for graduate students and established academics tilling the fields of attribution processes.”

Contemporary Psychology


“This book is a major achievement that extends Weiner's already impressive attribution theory of motivation in new directions. With pristine clarity it demonstrates how judgment of responsibility can be used to generalize theoretical principles derived from the study of achievement evaluation to a wide variety of behaviors. The result is a comprehensive theory of social conduct that is essential reading for anyone interested in human behavior.”

—Frank D. Fincham, Ph.D., FBPsS, University of Wales, Cardiff


“Professor Weiner has made a bold attempt to present a scientific analysis of the issues involved in assigning responsibility and blame. In contrast with traditional solutions, he argues that it is not blame but emotion (anger or sympathy) that mediates subsequent social behavior. Weiner's clear thinking and relevant empirical data bring a fresh and interesting perspective to highly significant and perennially debated social and moral issues.”

—Carroll E. Izard, Ph.D., Unidel Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Delaware


“...we pronounce the book good, judge it innocent of poor scholarship, and sentence it to having a long impact on research and theory on interpersonal judgment....this book is a significant read with enormous strengths and a provocative, testable point of view. It presents an important perspective that adds emotional and moral elements into our more cognitive models for judgments of others....accessible to a broad audience....the text is appropriate both for undergraduates and for graduate students and established academics tilling the fields of attribution processes. The book can serve as a wonderful teaching tool as the reader completes studies, gets personally involved, and therefore easily grasps the ideas and findings.”

—Kathryn C. Oleson and Robert M. Arkin, Contemporary Psychology

Table of Contents

1. The Anatomy of Responsibility

2. Responsibility and Achievement Evaluation

3. Responsibility and Stigmatization

4. AIDS and Stigmatization

5. Responsibility, Stigmatization, Mental Illness, and the Family

6. Helping Behavior

7. Aggression

8. Reducing Inferences of Responsibility: Excuses and Confession

9. On the Construction of Psychological Theory and Other Issues


About the Author

Bernard Weiner, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles. A leading contributor to the field of attribution theory, he has written, coauthored, or edited 13 books and published more than 125 journal articles and book chapters. The recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, his work has also been honored by a Donald Campbell Distinguished Research Award from the Division of Personality and Social Psychology of the American Psychological Association, and an honorary doctorate from the University of Bielefeld, Germany.

Audience

Social and motivation psychologists, clinical and research psychologists, as well as mental health practitioners.

Course Use

Written in an accessible style, it also serves as an advanced text for students in these fields.