Drawing on an analogy to language, I argue that a suite of novel questions emerge when we consider our moral faculty in a similar light. In particular, I suggest the possibility that our moral judgments are derived from unconscious, intuitive processes that operate over the causal-intentional structure of actions and their consequences. On this model, we are endowed with a moral faculty that generates judgments about permissible and forbidden actions prior to the involvement of our emotions and systems of conscious, rational deliberation. This framing of the problem sets up specific predictions about the role of particular neural structures and psychological processes in the generation of moral judgments as well as in the generation of mora...
Is moral judgment intuitive or deliberative? The parallel morality hypothesis suggests that the answ...
Cognitive and emotional processes both seem to contribute in the production of moral judgments, but ...
An ancient tradition that conceives of reason and emotion as opposed still underlies some strands of...
Drawing on an analogy to language, I argue that a suite of novel questions emerge when we consider o...
We use the phrase ‘‘moral intuition” to describe the appearance in consciousness of moral judgments ...
Humans express complex moral behaviour, from altruism to antisocial acts. The investigationof the ne...
Humans are a social species. Automatic affective responses generated by neural systems wired into ou...
The neuro-scientific study of moral actions and judgments is particularly relevant to medicine, esp...
Philosophers use the phrase ‘‘moral intuition” to describe the appearance in consciousness of moral ...
Some of the most fundamental psychological questions concerning human relations center on morality a...
ABSTRACT This article reviews recent advances in the cognitive neuroscience of moral judgment and be...
Morally judicious behavior forms the fabric of human sociality. Here, we sought to investigate neura...
During the cognitive revolution, moral judgment was seen as primarily caused by conscious language-b...
<p>Moral cognition represents a foundational faculty of the human species. Our sense of morality dev...
The human response in moral situations is well documented, but how thought maps onto and affects mor...
Is moral judgment intuitive or deliberative? The parallel morality hypothesis suggests that the answ...
Cognitive and emotional processes both seem to contribute in the production of moral judgments, but ...
An ancient tradition that conceives of reason and emotion as opposed still underlies some strands of...
Drawing on an analogy to language, I argue that a suite of novel questions emerge when we consider o...
We use the phrase ‘‘moral intuition” to describe the appearance in consciousness of moral judgments ...
Humans express complex moral behaviour, from altruism to antisocial acts. The investigationof the ne...
Humans are a social species. Automatic affective responses generated by neural systems wired into ou...
The neuro-scientific study of moral actions and judgments is particularly relevant to medicine, esp...
Philosophers use the phrase ‘‘moral intuition” to describe the appearance in consciousness of moral ...
Some of the most fundamental psychological questions concerning human relations center on morality a...
ABSTRACT This article reviews recent advances in the cognitive neuroscience of moral judgment and be...
Morally judicious behavior forms the fabric of human sociality. Here, we sought to investigate neura...
During the cognitive revolution, moral judgment was seen as primarily caused by conscious language-b...
<p>Moral cognition represents a foundational faculty of the human species. Our sense of morality dev...
The human response in moral situations is well documented, but how thought maps onto and affects mor...
Is moral judgment intuitive or deliberative? The parallel morality hypothesis suggests that the answ...
Cognitive and emotional processes both seem to contribute in the production of moral judgments, but ...
An ancient tradition that conceives of reason and emotion as opposed still underlies some strands of...