id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_zc5dz55a5zhkdjcewybhxiamra Russell S. Cropanzano Deontic Justice and Organizational Neuroscience 2016 22 .pdf application/pdf 19164 1759 56 However, people are most likely to make the effort to apply justice rules, when they experience both cognitive empathy and model—application of justice rules, cognitive empathy, and use of justice rules to assess events, cognitive empathy, and Research on deontic justice suggests that individuals make justice rules, cognitive empathy, that neural systems involved in both emotional and cognitive processes are relevant in the appraisal of moral rules. that makes social life possible.' Additional evidence supporting the role of empathy in human morality has been for example, appear to treat empathy as a specific emotional state, which involves mindfulness of, and responsiveness to, another individual's concerns (cf., Bagozzi and here we refer to cognitive empathy as the deliberate psychological process of recognizing and understanding misinterpretation of social situations and socially inappropriate behavior (Rolls 1996), supporting the PFC's overarching empathic role in deontic justice evaluations. ./cache/work_zc5dz55a5zhkdjcewybhxiamra.pdf ./txt/work_zc5dz55a5zhkdjcewybhxiamra.txt