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Yes, I am back :) Sorry, been a busy day!
"it seems to be more about the reason for your answer than the answer itself. For instance if you choose option 3, this says that your stage of moral development is 2, conventional but if your reason is that people should take responsibility for their choices and that by stealing the drug and going to court, Heinz is bringing the supposed avarice of the drug company to public attention, then it could be argued that this demonstrates stage 3 (post conventional) thinking."
Definitely agree here. I did feel like the drug company kind of gets "let off" in all cases.
The post-conventional stage seems to be about accepting your inability to effect the situation as much as anything else. Do you think this is part of the "abstraction"?
"I am also very dubious indeed about the assertion that people who have a higher moral sense have a duty to break laws which they consider to be immoral in their judgement......"
Why? I think an immoral law would be worth breaking.
It again, doesn't fit nicely with the idea of the post-conventional morals being based on abstract concepts. What if your abstract concept of "freedom" meant someone was free to kill (to be obvious and blunt in my example)?