Atlas of Moral Psychology

Author: Gray Kurt; Graham Jesse  

Publisher: Guilford Publications Inc‎

Publication year: 2017

E-ISBN: 9781462532605

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781462532568

Subject: B82-054 道德与心理

Keyword: 心理学派别及其研究,伦理学(道德哲学),社会学

Language: ENG

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Description

This comprehensive and cutting-edge volume maps out the terrain of moral psychology, a dynamic and evolving area of research. In 57 concise chapters, leading authorities and up-and-coming scholars explore fundamental issues and current controversies. The volume systematically reviews the empirical evidence base and presents influential theories of moral judgment and behavior. It is organized around the key questions that must be addressed for a complete understanding of the moral mind.

Chapter

2. Reasoning at the Root of Morality

3. Moral Judgment: Reflective, Interactive, Spontaneous, Challenging, and Always Evolving

4. On the Possibility of Intuitive and Deliberative Processes Working in Parallel in Moral Judgment

5. The Wrong and the Bad

PART II. Morality and Feeling

6. Empathy Is a Moral Force

7. Moral Values and Motivations: How Special Are They?

8. A Component Process Model of Disgust, Anger, and Moral Judgment

9. A Functional Conflict Theory of Moral Emotions

10. Getting Emotions Right in Moral Psychology

PART III. Morality, Social Cognition, and Identity

11. What Do We Evaluate When We Evaluate Moral Character?

12. Moral Cognition and Its Basis in Social Cognition and Social Regulation

13. Morality Is Personal

14. A Social Cognitive Model of Moral Identity

15. Identity Is Essentially Moral

16. The Core of Morality Is the Moral Self

17. Thinking Morally about Animals

PART IV. Morality and Intergroup Conflict

18. Morality Is for Choosing Sides

19. Morality for Us versus Them

20. Pleasure in Response to Outgroup Pain as a Motivator of Intergroup Aggression

21. How Can Universal Stereotypes Be Immoral?

PART V. Morality and Culture

22. Moral Foundations Theory: On the Advantages of Moral Pluralism over Moral Monism

23. The Model of Moral Motives: A Map of the Moral Domain

24. Relationship Regulation Theory

25. A Stairway to Heaven: A Terror Management Theory Perspective on Morality

26. Moral Heroes Are Puppets

27. Morality: A Historical Invention

28. The History of Moral Norms

PART VI. Morality and the Body

29. The Moralization of the Body: Protecting and Expanding the Boundaries of the Self

30. Grounded Morality

PART VII. Morality and Beliefs

31. Moral Vitalism

32. The Objectivity of Moral Beliefs

33. Folk Theories in the Moral Domain

34. Free Will and Moral Psychology

35. The Geographies of Religious and Nonreligious Morality

36. The Egocentric Teleological Bias: How Self‑Serving Morality Shapes Perceptions of Intelligent Design

PART VIII. Dynamic Moral Judgment

37. Moralization: How Acts Become Wrong

38. Moral Coherence Processes and Denial of Moral Complexity

39. What Is Blame and Why Do We Love It?

PART IX. Developmental and Evolutionary Roots of Morality

40. Do Animals Have a Sense of Fairness?

41. The Infantile Roots of Sociomoral Evaluations

42. Atlas Hugged: The Foundations of Human Altruism

43. The Developmental Origins of Infants’ Distributive Fairness Concerns

44. Vulnerability‑Based Morality

45. The Attachment Approach to Moral Judgment

46. Ethogenesis: Evolution, Early Experience, and Moral Becoming

PART X. Moral Behavior

47. On the Distinction between Unethical and Selfish Behavior

48. In Search of Moral Equilibrium: Person, Situation, and Their Interplay in Behavioral Ethics

49. Unconflicted Virtue

50. Moral Clarity

PART XI. Studying Morality

51. Why Developmental Neuroscience Is Critical for the Study of Morality

52. Implicit Moral Cognition

53. Into the Wild: Big Data Analytics in Moral Psychology

54. Applied Moral Psychology

PART XII. Clarifying Morality

55. The Moral Domain

56. There Is No Important Distinction between Moral and Nonmoral Cognition

57. Asking the Right Questions in Moral Psychology

Index

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