Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
879431 | Current Opinion in Psychology | 2015 | 6 Pages |
•We review research on the psychological and neural basis of moral cognition.•Moral cognition is widely distributed throughout the brain.•Social context modulates moral cognition.•Moral judgments are dynamically updated based on new information.•Models of moral cognition involves more than two processes.
Prominent theories of morality have integrated philosophy with psychology and biology. Although this approach has been highly generative, we argue that it does not fully capture the rich and dynamic nature of moral cognition. We review research from the dual-process tradition, in which moral intuitions are automatically elicited and reasoning is subsequently deployed to correct these initial intuitions. We then describe how the computations underlying moral cognition are diverse and widely distributed throughout the brain. Finally, we illustrate how social context modulates these computations, recruiting different systems for real (vs. hypothetical) moral judgments, examining the dynamic process by which moral judgments are updated. In sum, we advocate for a shift from dual-process to dynamic system models of moral cognition.