Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
142088 | Trends in Cognitive Sciences | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Recent work in the cognitive and neurobiological sciences indicates an important relationship between emotion and moral judgment. Based on this evidence, several researchers have argued that emotions are the source of our intuitive moral judgments. However, despite the richness of the correlational data between emotion and morality, we argue that the current neurological, behavioral, developmental and evolutionary evidence is insufficient to demonstrate that emotion is necessary for making moral judgments. We suggest instead, that the source of moral judgments lies in our causal-intentional psychology; emotion often follows from these judgments, serving a primary role in motivating morally relevant action.
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Authors
Bryce Huebner, Susan Dwyer, Marc Hauser,