The Emotional Construction of Morals
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Abstract
Abstract This book argues that recent work in philosophy, neuroscience, and anthropology supports two radical hypotheses about the nature of morality: moral values are based on emotional responses, and these emotional responses are inculcated by culture, not hard-wired through natural selection. In the first half of the book, the hypothesis that morality has an emotional foundation is defended. Evidence from brain imaging, social psychology, and psychopathology suggest that, when we judge something to be right or wrong, we are merely expressing our emotions. The book claims that these emotions do not track objective features of reality; rather, the rightness and wrongness of an act consists in the fact that…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 333
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Morality
- Moral disengagement
- Relativism
- Moral psychology
- Moral authority
- Social cognitive theory of morality
- Moral development
- Cultural relativism
- Gender equality