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
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
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
PART VII. Morality and Beliefs
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
47. On the Distinction between Unethical
and Selfish Behavior
48. In Search of Moral Equilibrium: Person, Situation, and Their Interplay in Behavioral Ethics
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
56. There Is No Important Distinction
between Moral and Nonmoral Cognition
57. Asking the Right Questions
in Moral Psychology