Selman's Role-Taking Theory
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Role-taking = the ability to mentally adopt another person’s point of view and understand how one’s own actions are perceived by others.
There are 5 stages of development:
| Selman Stage | Core Perspective-Taking Capacity | Leadership Maturity | Moral Intelligence Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level 0 – Egocentric | Cannot reliably distinguish own perspective from others; projects own feelings onto others | Pre-leadership / reactive actor; poor feedback reception; blames others; weak team function | Low moral scope; ethics framed as self-protection or impulse; limited empathy; harm often unrecognized |
| Level 1 – Subjective | Recognizes others have different views but cannot coordinate perspectives; differences explained by different information access | Directive, authority-based leadership; manages simple roles; limited empathy; assumes agreement if others had same information | Rule-based morality; fairness framed as equal treatment without context; intent of others underweighted |
| Level 2 – Self-Reflective / Reciprocal | Can take another’s perspective and reflect on how self appears to others | Relational leadership; capable of feedback, coaching, negotiation, and trust repair | Interpersonal moral intelligence; considers intent and impact; emerging accountability; capable of apology and repair |
| Level 3 – Mutual / Third-Person | Coordinates multiple perspectives simultaneously; can take an impartial observer view | Systems-aware leadership; facilitates dialogue, resolves conflict, aligns stakeholders, balances competing interests | Contextual moral reasoning; integrates multiple values, tradeoffs, and second-order effects; equity over simple equality |
| Level 4 – Societal / In-Depth | Embeds perspectives within social systems, institutions, and cultural roles | Civilizational / institutional leadership; designs rules, norms, and incentive systems; orients action toward long-term public good | High moral intelligence; integrates structural justice, externalities, long-term consequences, and stewardship of commons |