- Moral Minds
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Moral Minds: How Nature Designed Our Universal Sense of Right and Wrong Author(s) Marc D. Hauser Language English Subject(s) Ethics, Morality, Anthropology, Evolution, History of Science and Philosophy of Biology Publisher Ecco press Publication date 22 August 2006 Media type Print ISBN 0060780703 OCLC Number 70407915 Dewey Decimal 171/.7 22 LC Classification BJ1012 .H348 2006 Moral Minds: How Nature Designed Our Universal Sense of Right and Wrong is a 2006 book by Harvard psychologist Marc Hauser in which he develops an empirically grounded theory to explain morality as a universal grammar. He draws evidence from evolutionary biology, moral and political philosophy, primatology, linguistics, and anthropology.
Hauser uses artificial moral dilemmas as a research strategy. The reason is that people already have moral judgments of real world cases such as abortion and euthanasia, so there is no intuition left. In artificial moral dilemmas intuition plays an important role. A second advantage of artificial cases is that they can be subtly modified to observe the effects on moral judgments on people. There is an internet version of the test called the Moral Sense Test[1] which is aimed at a worldwide public.
References
Categories:- 2006 books
- Books about evolution
- Ethics books
- Science book stubs
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