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      • Moral courage is defined as brave behavior, accompanied by anger and indignation, intending to enforce societal and ethical norms without considering one’s own social costs. Social costs (i.e., negative social consequences) distinguish moral courage from other prosocial behaviors like helping behavior.
      www.researchgate.net/publication/232528056_What_is_moral_courage_Definition_explication_and_classification_of_a_complex_construct
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  2. Jan 1, 2010 · Social costs (i.e., negative social consequences) distinguish moral courage from other prosocial behaviors like helping behavior. Similarities between moral courage and heroism and between...

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    • Silvia Osswald

      Moral courage is defined as brave behavior accompanied by...

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  3. Social costs (i.e., negative social consequences) distinguish moral courage from other prosocial behaviors like helping behavior. Similarities between moral courage and heroism and between moral courage and social control are discussed.

    • Silvia Osswald, Tobias Greitemeyer, Peter Fischer, Dieter Frey
    • 2010
  4. Apr 1, 2022 · Moral courage, that is, defending moral beliefs despite personal risks, is often seen as a hallmark of prosocial behavior. We argue that prosociality in moral courage is, however, complex. While its prosociality is often evident at a higher societal level, it can be contested in some aspects of morally courageous acts.

    • Julia Sasse, Mengyao Li, Anna Baumert, Anna Baumert
    • 2022
  5. Jan 1, 2011 · Especially social costs (i.e., negative social consequences) distinguish moral courage from other prosocial behaviors like helping behavior. Furthermore, similarities between moral courage and heroism as well as between moral courage and social control are discussed.

  6. Feb 2, 2010 · On a theoretical basis, these three moral/prosocial behaviors can be separated along a cost dimension, namely the cost for the helper. The anticipation of low versus high cost distinguishes helping behavior from heroism and moral courage, respectively.

    • Silvia Osswald, Tobias Greitemeyer, Peter Fischer, Dieter Frey
    • 2010
  7. Social costs (i.e., negative social consequences) distinguish moral courage from other pro-social behaviors.

  8. Apr 1, 2022 · Standing up in defense of moral beliefs, despite personal risks, certainly can have clear prosocial qualities on a broad societal level. In this article, we qualified this perception and argued that prosociality in morally courageous acts is highly complex and requires differentiation.