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    Moral Psychology and Human Agency: Philosophical Essays on the Science of Ethics

    Moral Psychology and Human Agency by D'Arms, Justin; Jacobson, Daniel;

    Philosophical Essays on the Science of Ethics

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 6 November 2014

    • ISBN 9780198717812
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages294 pages
    • Size 240x164x23 mm
    • Weight 614 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    This volume examines the implications of developments in the science of ethics for philosophical theorizing about moral psychology and human agency. These ten new essays in empirically informed philosophy illuminate such topics as responsibility, the self, and the role in morality of mental states such as desire, emotion, and moral judgement.

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    Long description:

    These ten original essays examine the moral and philosophical implications of developments in the science of ethics, the growing movement that seeks to use recent empirical findings to answer long-standing ethical questions. Efforts to make moral psychology a thoroughly empirical discipline have divided philosophers along methodological fault lines, isolating discussions that will profit more from intellectual exchange. This volume takes an even-handed approach, including essays from advocates of empirical ethics as well as those who are sceptical of some of its central claims. Some of these essays make novel use of empirical findings to develop philosophical research programs regarding such crucial moral phenomena as desire, emotion, and memory. Others bring new critical scrutiny to bear on some of the most influential proposals of the empirical ethics movement, including the claim that evolution undermines moral realism, the effort to recruit a dual-process model of the mind to support consequentialism against other moral theories, and the claim that ordinary evaluative judgments are seldom if ever sensitive to reasons, because moral reasoning is merely the post hoc rationalization of unthinking emotional response.

    [T]he essays confirm that there clearly is great potential in combining rigorous philosophical analysis with empirical work on moral psychology

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction
    Intuitive and Counterintuitive Morality
    Moral Psychology as Accountability
    Remnants of Character
    Knowing What We Are Doing
    Meta-Cognition, Mind-Reading, and Humean Moral Agency
    The Episodic Sense of Self
    The Motivational Theory of Emotions
    The Reward Theory of Desire in Moral Psychology
    Does Evolutionary Psychology Show That Normativity Is Mind-Dependent?
    Sentimentalism and Scientism
    Index

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