|
THE NEW SCIENCE OF MORALITY
THE REALITY CLUB: Liane Young, Robert Kurzban, Jonathan Baron, Linda J. Skitka, Kees van den Bos, Daniel R. Kelly, Peter Ditto, Alison Gopnik, Randolph Nesse, M.D., , Scott Atran, Daniel L. Everett, Christina Bicchieri |
CONSENSUS STATEMENT 1) Morality is a natural phenomenon and a cultural phenomenon 2) Many of the psychological building blocks of morality are innate Many of the building blocks of morality can be found, in some form, in other primates, including sympathy, friendship, hierarchical relationships, and coalition-building. Many of the building blocks of morality are visible in all human culture, including sympathy, friendship, reciprocity, and the ability to represent others' beliefs and intentions. Some of the building blocks of morality become operational quite early in childhood, such as the capacity to respond with empathy to human suffering, to act altruistically, and to punish those who harm others. 3) Moral judgments are often made intuitively, with little deliberation or conscious weighing of evidence and alternatives 4) Conscious moral reasoning plays multiple roles in our moral lives 5) Moral judgments and values are often at odds with actual behavior 6) Many areas of the brain are recruited for moral cognition, yet there is no "moral center" in the brain 7) Morality varies across individuals and cultures Morality varies across cultures in many ways, including the overall moral domain (what kinds of things get regulated), as well as specific moral norms, practices, values, and institutions. Moral virtues and values are strongly influenced by local and historical circumstances, such as the nature of economic activity, form of government, frequency of warfare, and strength of institutions for dispute resolution. 8) Moral systems support human flourishing, to varying degrees The existence of moral diversity as an empirical fact does not support an "anything-goes" version of moral relativism in which all moral systems must be judged to be equally good. We note, however, that moral evaluations across cultures must be made cautiously because there are multiple justifiable visions of flourishing and wellbeing, even within Western societies. Furthermore, because of the power of moral intuitions to influence reasoning, social scientists studying morality are at risk of being biased by their own culturally shaped values and desires.
____ |
ON "A STATEMENT OF CONSENSUS" Liane Young, Robert Kurzban, Jonathan Baron, Linda J. Skitka, Kees van den Bos, Daniel R. Kelly, Peter Ditto, Alison Gopnik, Randolph Nesse, M.D., , Scott Atran, Daniel L. Everett, Christina Bicchieri [...] |
John Brockman, Editor
and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher contact: [email protected] Copyright © 2010 By Edge Foundation, Inc All Rights Reserved. |
|Top| |