Sentimental Rules
On the Natural Foundations of Moral Judgement
Nichols, Shaun,
Harry Lightsey Associate Professor of Humanities,
College of Charleston
Print publication date: 2004
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2005 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-516934-8 doi:10.1093/0195169344.001.0001 |
|
|
Abstract:
This volume develops a new account of the nature of moral judgment. Evidence from developmental psychology and psychopathologies suggests that emotions play a crucial role in normal moral judgment. This indicates that philosophical accounts of moral judgment that eschew the emotions are mistaken. However, the volume also argues that prevailing philosophical accounts that embrace a role for the emotions are also mistaken. The empirical work points to a quite different account of moral judgment than philosophers have considered, an account in which normative rules and emotions make independent contributions to moral judgment. Further, the volume argues that the emotions play an important role in the normative rules that get fixed in the culture. The history of norms indicates that norms that resonate with our emotions are more likely to survive.
Keywords: cultural evolution, metaethics, moral judgment, moral objectivism, moral psychology, naturalistic philosophy, psychopathologies, sentimentalism Table of Contents
Preface
1.
Norms with Feeling
2.
Sparks of Benevolence
3.
Is It Irrational to Be Amoral?
4.
Philosophical Sentimentalism
5.
Sentiment, Reason, and Motivation
6.
A Fragment of the Genealogy of Norms
7.
Moral Evolution
8.
Commonsense Objectivism and the Persistence of Moral Judgment
Bibliography
Index
|
|