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==9: FEB 8==
+
==8: FEB 8. Unit Two: Moral Psychology==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
:*Robert Sapolsky, C 13, "Morality" pp. 483-493
+
:*View: System 1 and System 2. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBVV8pch1dM Veritasium, “The Science of Thinking”] 12 mins.
:*Haidt, Chapter 4, "Vote for Me (Here's Why)" (23)
 
  
===Sapolsky. Behave. C 13, 483-493===
+
:*Utilitarianism: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-a739VjqdSI PBS Philosophy Crash course on utilitarianism]
 +
::*The Trolley Problem [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WB3Q5EF4Sg The Trolley Problem].
 +
::*Recommended to browse: Self-driving cars with Trolley problems: [http://www.cnet.com/news/self-driving-car-advocates-tangle-with-messy-morality/], [https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/10/the-cold-logic-of-drunk-people/381908/ The Cold Logic of Drunk People]
  
:*'''Origins of Social/Moral Intuitions in Babies and Monkeys and Chimps'''
+
:*Tomasello - "Human Morality as Cooperation Plus" (143-157); 14)
::*More infant morality:
 
:::*weigh commission more than ommision - infants track commission better than ommission, as in adults.
 
:::*Prosociality - helper puppet studies, (watch previous YouTubes)
 
:::*Punishment - sweets go to helper puppets
 
:::*Tracks secondary punishment - secondary friends study - Babies prefer secondary puppets who were nice to nice puppets and punished bad puppets.
 
::*Capuchin monkey study (deWaal) - "monkey fairness". (demonstrated also with macaques monkeys, crows, ravens, and dogs), details on 485.  google "crows solving puzzles" or "[https://youtu.be/CXcRw6Piaj8 elephants solving puzzles]"  animals are much more intelligent than we have historically understood. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=meiU6TxysCg]  “Inequity aversion”
 
::*Chimp version of Ultimatum Game - in the deWaal version, chimps tend toward equity unless the proposer can give the token directly to the grape dispensers. 486
 
::*"other regarding preferences" (Does the animal show awareness of other's preferences?) in monkeys, but not in chimps! Keep this in mind the next time you are thinking about whether to cooperate with a chimp.
 
::*some evidence of "solidarity" in one inequity study the advantaged monkey (the one who gets grapes) stops working as well.
 
::*Interesting comment: '''human morality transcends species boundary'''. starts before us.
 
  
:*'''Exemptions for testifying against relatives and vmPFC patients who will trade relatives''' in Trolley situations.
+
:*Churchland C4 – “Norms and Values” – (96-110; 14) – neurology of rewards, empathy, Ultimatum game, cultural effects.
::*vmPFC damaged patient will sacrifice a relative to save four non-relatives. 
 
::*Interesting note about criminal law exemptions.
 
  
:*'''Context: Neuroscience of the Trolley Problem and "Intuition discounting"'''
+
===In-Class===
::*dlPFC (focused on reasoning) in lever condition and vmPFC (focused on emotional information processing) in bridge condition. Correlation of vmPFC activation with likelihood of not pushing the guy of the bridge.
 
::*Greene's hypothesis: not so much because it is "up close and personal" as we speculated, but in lever condition the killing of the one is a side-effect.  In bridge condition, its ''because'' of the killing. Different kinds of intentionality.  Ok for most people if you push someone out of the way on your way to the lever.  Not intentional killing.
 
::*Loop condition -- you know you have to kill the person on the side track, should be like bridge condition, but test subjects match lever condition, roughly. 
 
::*Hypothesis: '''Intuitions are local; heavily discounted for time and space.'''  (Think of other examples of this.)  Stories in which your reaction to something changes when you learn where it happens.
 
::*Related point about proximity - leave money around vs. cokes.  Cokes disappear. One step from money and the rationalization is easier. (Also in Ariely research)  Singer's pool scenario vs. sending money for absolute poverty relief. 
 
  
:*'''Small Group Discussion''' — Let’s pause here to consider this question: When should we resist “intuition discounting”?  In Singer’s pool example?  When the harm to the distant person is a “side effect”?  How important is consistency (dlPFC) vs emotional distinctions (vmPFC)?  Cases:
+
:*System 1 and System 2 - Lecture with research from moral psychology
::*Addressing suffering in your own home town v. Far away
+
:*Giving Peer Criticism
::*Not buying goods from a distant country because of their human rights abuses?
 
::*Over-riding your vmPFC and pushing the big guy off the bridge?
 
  
::*Priming study on cheating involving bankers. 492 - shows "intuition discounting" when primed to think about work identity. more cheating the more primed about "role" - "It's not me"...
+
===Veritasium video, “The Science of Thinking” -- System 1 and System 2===
  
:*'''But this circumstance is different...'''
+
:*examples of letting Sys1 do the job and get it wrong: earth around sun, bat/ball price.
::*Under stress subjects make more egoistic, rationalizing judgments regarding emoitonal moral dilemmas.
 
::*[this is not mentioned in the text, but it is what he is talking about: the '''Fundamental Attribution Error''' - neuro-evidence for the Fundamental Attribution Error [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_attribution_error]
 
::*we judge ourselves by internal motives and others by external actions.  Our failings/successes elicit shame/pride others elicit anger and indignation or emulation (envy?).  The FAE suggests that we explain our own failures more generously than the failures of others.  We offer ourselves excuses (inner lawyer) but are biased toward inferring bad intent from others.
 
  
===Haidt, Chapter 4, "Vote for Me (Here's Why)"===
+
:*Sys1 and Sys2 - Gunn and Drew. 
 +
::*Sys1 is quick, selective, fills in gaps (“The Cat”), part of process for long term memory
 +
::*Sys2 is slow, deliberate, limited to working memory. 
  
:*This chapter explores the second part of "Intuitions come first, reasoning second"Point: We are intuitive creatures, but we are also strategic.
+
:*”chunking” - Sys1 finds patterns that help us store long term memory“Muscle memory” - going from Sys2 to Sys1. Deliberate and effortful at first, then more automatic.  
  
:*'''Introduction'''
+
:*”Add 1” task - pupil dilation, heart rate increaseThree cheers for psychophysiology!!!
::*Ring of Gyges - Glaucon got it rightReason is more about seeking justification that impartial truth.  Because of that, we might want to "Make sure that everyone's reputation is on the line all the time" (even the babies in the room are keeping track!)
 
::*Functionalism in psychology applied to morality - What does moral reasoning do for us?  Help us find truths or help us pursue ''socially strategic goals''. (Comments?)
 
::*Tetlock: accountability research
 
:::*Exploratory vs. Confirmatory thought (we’re better at the latter)
 
:::*Conditions promoting exploratory thought (def: evenhanded consideration of alt POVs)
 
::::*1) knowing ahead of time that you'll be called to account; [so, transparency! I might be a better professor if I know you can see all of my grading.]
 
::::*2) not knowing what the audience thinks;
 
::::*3) believing that the audience is well informed and interested in truth or accuracy.
 
:::*Point: We will tend toward confirmatory thought (Hume - Reason a slave of the passions) unless our reputation is at stake (in which case we are more motivated to justify ourselves to others) or we take measures to reign in our tendencies.
 
  
:*'''Section 1: Obsessed with polls'''
+
:*In overcoming automatic thinking, you need to bring in Sys2 (Note: This is important in overcoming bias, which relies on automatic thinking.)
::*Leary's research on self-esteem importance-  "sociometer" -- non-conscious level mostly.
 
  
:*'''Section 2: Confirmation bias and exploratory thought'''
+
:*Ads - The “un” campaign got around Sys1’s filter for boring insurance ads.  
::*Confirmation bias (def: tendency to seek and interp. evidence to confirm our view)
 
:::*Wasson again -- number series
 
:::*Deann Kuhn -- 80: We are horrible at theorizing (requiring exploratory thought)....
 
:::*David Perkins research on reason giving - IQ only predicts ability to generate "my-side" arguments. Interesting criticism of education here!
 
  
:*'''Section 3: We're really good at finding rationalizations for things.'''
+
:*Pedagogy - Active pedagogy - making you do something with the information (small groups, worksheets, but also interactive discussion) is better than passive learning environment(Note caveat - Life learners do this also on their own and cultivate behaviors that keep Sys2 involvedOr, some of the best students in the class making Sys2 work hard even just while listening!
::*More examples of people behaving as Glaucon would have predicted.   
 
:::*Members of parliament cheat on their privileges when they know there is no accountability.
 
:::*Plausible deniability - correct change studyOnly 20% speak up unless asked, then 60%.  (Examples from your experience?)
 
:::*Ariely, matrix-cheating research - ''Predictably Irrational''
 
  
:*'''Section 4: Can I believe it? vs. Must I believe it?'''
+
===System 1 and System 2 in moral psychology===
::*When we want to believe something we ask the first question, when we don't want to believe something, we ask the second question.
 
::*"Motivated reasoning" - 84ff.  Test subjects receiving low IQ score browse more articles against IQ tests.  Female coffee drinkers find more flaws in studies associating caffeine and breast cancer.  Test subjects interpret ambiguous character in direction that gives reward. 
 
  
:*'''Section 5: Application to political beliefs: Partisan Brains'''
+
:*gloss Elephant and Rider metaphor in Haidt. Plato's Charioteer.  (Diff metaphors for consciousness.)
:::*Does self interest or group affiliation predict policy preferences? Not so much self-interestWe are groupish. (Interesting implications for democracies governed by political parties.)
+
 
:::*Drew Westen's fMRI research on strongly partisan individuals. We feel threat to dissonant information (like hypocrisy or lying) about our preferred leader, but no threat, or even pleasure, at the problems for the opponent.  the partisan brain. Difference in brain activation did not seem to be rational/cog (dlPFC).  bit of dopamine after threat passes. (Important point: cog/emo dissonance is painful! -except for good philosophers.)
+
:*(This is from Haidt, C3, "Elephants rule" - In that chapter he's introducing some research in moral psychology that shows how System 1 works, especially with value judgements. "Intuitions comes first" is another way of saying that system 1 is fast and on the scene judging before system 2 gets out of bed.)
:::*Research suggests that ethicists are not more ethical than others. (89 Schwitzgebel)
+
 
:::*Mercier and Sperber. [https://www.dan.sperber.fr/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/MercierSperberWhydohumansreason.pdf Why Do Humans Reason?]
+
:*Personal Anecdote from Haidt's married life: your inner lawyer  (automatic speech)
:::*Good thinking as an emergent property. individual neurons vs. networksanalogy to social intelligence.  
+
:*Priming studies: "take" "often"  -- working with neutral stories also
:::*Statement, 90, on H's view of political life in light of this way of theorizing. read and discuss. Analogy of neuron to brainIndividual to group. Introduce term "social epistemology". '''What makes us smarter togetherWhat makes us stupider?'''
+
 
 +
:*'''Research supporting "intuitions come first"'''
 +
 
 +
:*1. Brains evaluate instantly and constantly - Zajonc on "affective primacy"- small flashes of pos/neg feeling from ongoing stimuli - even applies to made up language "mere exposure effect" tendency to have more positive responses to something just be repeat exposure.
 +
 
 +
:*2. Social and Political judgements are especially intuitive
 +
::*'''Affective Priming''' - flashing word pairs with dissonance: "flower - happiness" vs. "hate - sunshine"
 +
::*Implicit Association Test  [https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/ Project Implicit] 
 +
::*Flashing word pairs with political terms causes '''dissonance'''. measurable delay in response when, say, conservatives read "Clinton" and "sunshine".  ''Dissonance is pain''.
 +
::*Todorov's work extending "attractiveness" advantage to snap judgements.  "Competency" judgments of political candidates correct 2/3 of time. Judgements of competence.  note speed of judgement .1 of a second.(59)
 +
 
 +
:*3. Bodies guide judgements --Fart Spray exaggerates moral judgements (!); Zhong: hand washing before and after moral judgements. Helzer and Pizarro: standing near a sanitizer strengthens conservatism.
 +
 
 +
:*4. Psychopaths: reason but don't feel - Transcript from Robert Hare research
 +
 
 +
:*5. Babies: feel but don't reason; Helper and hinder puppets. The babies are thinking with concepts...system 1.
 +
 
 +
===Tomasello - "Human Morality as Cooperation Plus" (143-157; 14)===
 +
 
 +
:*Note: The text has a couple of pages at the end from a different part of the bookThis material summarizes some of the early childhood research that Tomasello uses to support his theory.
 +
 
 +
:*Diffs bt US and other primates:
 +
::*Great apes are "instrumentally rational"; mostly competitive, some friendships, not a lot of helping.
 +
::*Chimps and bonobos don't use structured cooperation, don't exclude freeriders, no concept of fairness.
 +
 
 +
:*Hypothesis: We (400K ago) were forced to develop a cooperative rationality that included concern for the well being of the partner, then group.  Values this explains: mutual respect, fairness, exclusion of free riders, allowance for "2nd person protest" ("Hey, you said you would...").  From there a collective intentionality that recognizes right and wrong as having an objective status. 
 +
 
 +
:*147: Paraphrased from "Rather.." Morality doesn't develop just by assessing the rational costs for individuals involved, but it might develop if we recognized our dependency on partners and the group. Relationships involve "investment", not just "payoffs" (as in game theory models).
 +
 
 +
:*Cooperation in reciprocal altruism models is fragile. Someone is always ready to make a sucker out of you and then cooperation goes to zero. 
 +
 
 +
:*Interdependence cultivates genuine concern for the partner, shared intentionality, self-other equivalence (of roles), "deservingness".
 +
 
 +
:*Ontogeny - how something comes to be.
 +
 
 +
::*Digression from text: "Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" - meaning "This phrase suggests that an organism's development will take it through each of the adult stages of its evolutionary history, or its phylogeny. [https://evolution.berkeley.edu/ontogeny-and-phylogeny/#:~:text=These%20scientists%20claimed%20that%20ontogeny,evolutionary%20history%2C%20or%20its%20phylogeny.].  Distinguish from the philosophy field: Ontology.
 +
 
 +
:*Contemporary children pass through two stages similar to the stage of the theory (2nd person morality and joint commitment). read at 155. The extra pages are from C3, which he mentions as providing evidence.  See summary box at end of pdf. 
 +
 
 +
:*prior to age 3, no recognition of social norms, but after, they will engage in '''3rd party punishment'''.
 +
 
 +
:*Go through text boxes from Chapter 3 at the end of the pdf.
 +
 
 +
===Giving Peer Criticism===
 +
 
 +
:*Some thoughts on helpful peer commenting:
 +
 
 +
:*You are only asked to write two or three sentences of comments, so choose wisely!  Your back evaluation score will be assessed on this.
 +
 
 +
:*Giving the kind of criticism that you would want to consider if it were your paper.
 +
 
 +
::*Give gentle criticisms that focus on your ''experience as a reader'':
 +
:::*"I'm having trouble understanding this sentence" NOT "This sentence makes no sense!" 
 +
:::*"I think more attention could have been paid to X NOT "You totally ignored the prompt!
 +
 
 +
::*Wrap a criticism with an affirmation or positive comment
 +
:::*"You cover the prompt pretty well, but you might have said more about x (or, I found y a bit of a digression)"
 +
:::*"Some interesting discussion here, esp about x, but you didn't address the prompt very completely ...."
 +
 
 +
::*General and specific -- Ok to identify general problem with the writing, but giving examples of the problem or potential solutions.
 +
:::*I found some of your sentences hard to followE.g. "I think that the main ...." was a bit redundant.
 +
:::*I thought the flow was generally good, but in paragraph 2 the second and third sentence seem to go in different directions.
 +
 
 +
===Utilitarianism - Additional notes===
 +
 
 +
:*Let's meet Jeremy Bentham.  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Bentham]
 +
 
 +
:*Brief historical intro to utilitarians: Early industrial society, "social statics" (early efforts to measure social conditions).  Utilitarians were seen as reformers. 
 +
 
 +
:*'''Fundamental consequentialist intuition''':  Most of what's important about morality can be seen in outcomes of our actions that promote happiness and human well-being.
 +
 
 +
:*Basic principles of utilitarian thought:
 +
 
 +
::*'''Equal Happiness Principle''': Everyone's happiness matters to them as much as mine does to me. Everyone's interests have equal weight. (Note this is a rational principle.  Emotionally, it's false.  Utilitarian thinking often involves overcoming a System 1 automatic (evolved) preference.)
 +
 
 +
:::*Note on method: this is a way to universalize.  Recall earlier discussion about conditions for ethical discourse. Ethics is about figuring out when we need to take a moral concern about something and, if we do, then we take on constraint (conversational): universalizability, equality of interests. (Note that also get to this result from Tomasello and Wrangham.)
 +
 
 +
::*'''Principle of Utility''': Act always so that you promote the greatest good for the greatest number. 
 +
:::*Hedonic version: Act to promote the greatest pleasure ...
 +
:::*Classical utilitarian: greatest balance of range of qualitatively diverse pleasures and aspects of well-being. More wholistic.
 +
:::*Preference utilitarian version: Act to maximally fulfill our interest in acting on our preferences. (Very compatibile with neo-liberal economic thinking.)
 +
 
 +
::*But what is utility?  What is a preference?
 +
::*'''Utility''': pleasure, what is useful, happiness, well-being. 
 +
:::*Is the utilitarian committed to maximizing happiness of individuals directly?  A utilitarian focused on promoting utility, might still acknowledge that promoting human happiness is mostly about protecting conditions for an individual's autonomous pursuit of happiness. Consider cases: When does promoting the greater good involve letting people make their own decisions vs. managing or regulating an issue centrally?
 +
:::*Conditions for the pursuit of happiness:  Order, stability, opportunity, education, health, rights, liberty.
 +
:::*Issue of protection of rights in utilitarian thought.   
 +
::*'''Preferences''': 
 +
:::*An indirect way to solve the problem of lack of agreement about goods.  Let's maximize opportunities for people to express their preferencesPositive: pushing the question of the good life to the individual.  Negative: High levels of individualism may reduce social trust.  Lack of action on opportunities to reduce suffering. 
 +
:::*But sometimes we ought to override preferences: Thought experiment: Returning a gun to an angry person. Is the angry person's preference one that has to count? People "prefer" to live in a way that is heating up the planet!
 +
:::*Cultural contradictions in our preferences: we prefer health, but we also "prefer" to eat the western diet, smoke things, and drink alcohol.  Which preferences should the utilitarian focus on?  Some preferences are based on bias or prejudice.
 +
 
 +
====Group Discussion: Assessing Utilitarianism====
 +
 
 +
:*Consider applying utilitarianism to different kinds of moral problems (from interpersonal ethics to public policy questions).  Identify three situations in which you would want to use utilitarianism and three situations in which you would not.
 +
 
 +
===Churchland C4 – “Norms and Values” – (96-110; 14)===
 +
 
 +
:*This chapter is about how the reward structures in the brain work similarly for social and non-social tasks.  This gives us a glimpse of the neurobiology of everyday ethics.  Getting norms and values right (learning them, showing them in your behavior, calling others out, moral shunning) involves the same reward system as non-social tasks, like finding a job or any search problems (getting a good deal on something, etc.)
 +
 
 +
:*100: The knowledge domains for social and non-social tasks are distinct. (Social knowledge tells me whether to make noisily slurping noises while eating noodlesOther knowledge helps me know that I should wait to split my wood till it is dry.
 +
 
 +
:*Applies to emotionally negative situations, like giving negative appraisal.  For this, we use empathy.  (More on empathy soon. You can think of it both as a way of acquiring knowledge about others’ experience and maintaining social bonds during emotionally negative situations (physical and mental suffering, failures to meet expectations, etc.). 
 +
 
 +
:*Churchland’s take on the Ultimatum Game research findings.  Typically, we say this research shows that we are not strictly rational as Responder.  But, Churchland suggests there might be a “social rationality” .  Also culturally variable.  P. 105.  Cites Henrich, market integration may be a variable (measured as: how much of your food do you get from the store). 
 +
 
 +
:*Really complicated Ultimatum Game research.  roughly, norm changes are affected by both conscious and unconcscious (Sys 2 and 1) neural processes.  Fashion as example of relatively unconscious cultural process. Norms that have changed this way: breastfeeding, recycling, sexually orientation.
 +
 
 +
:*What is happening in the brain during moral experienceWe are getting rewarding or not based on lots of social knowledge and cues from others.

Latest revision as of 21:08, 8 February 2024

8: FEB 8. Unit Two: Moral Psychology

Assigned

  • Tomasello - "Human Morality as Cooperation Plus" (143-157); 14)
  • Churchland C4 – “Norms and Values” – (96-110; 14) – neurology of rewards, empathy, Ultimatum game, cultural effects.

In-Class

  • System 1 and System 2 - Lecture with research from moral psychology
  • Giving Peer Criticism

Veritasium video, “The Science of Thinking” -- System 1 and System 2

  • examples of letting Sys1 do the job and get it wrong: earth around sun, bat/ball price.
  • Sys1 and Sys2 - Gunn and Drew.
  • Sys1 is quick, selective, fills in gaps (“The Cat”), part of process for long term memory
  • Sys2 is slow, deliberate, limited to working memory.
  • ”chunking” - Sys1 finds patterns that help us store long term memory. “Muscle memory” - going from Sys2 to Sys1. Deliberate and effortful at first, then more automatic.
  • ”Add 1” task - pupil dilation, heart rate increase. Three cheers for psychophysiology!!!
  • In overcoming automatic thinking, you need to bring in Sys2 (Note: This is important in overcoming bias, which relies on automatic thinking.)
  • Ads - The “un” campaign got around Sys1’s filter for boring insurance ads.
  • Pedagogy - Active pedagogy - making you do something with the information (small groups, worksheets, but also interactive discussion) is better than passive learning environment. (Note caveat - Life learners do this also on their own and cultivate behaviors that keep Sys2 involved. Or, some of the best students in the class making Sys2 work hard even just while listening!

System 1 and System 2 in moral psychology

  • gloss Elephant and Rider metaphor in Haidt. Plato's Charioteer. (Diff metaphors for consciousness.)
  • (This is from Haidt, C3, "Elephants rule" - In that chapter he's introducing some research in moral psychology that shows how System 1 works, especially with value judgements. "Intuitions comes first" is another way of saying that system 1 is fast and on the scene judging before system 2 gets out of bed.)
  • Personal Anecdote from Haidt's married life: your inner lawyer (automatic speech)
  • Priming studies: "take" "often" -- working with neutral stories also
  • Research supporting "intuitions come first"
  • 1. Brains evaluate instantly and constantly - Zajonc on "affective primacy"- small flashes of pos/neg feeling from ongoing stimuli - even applies to made up language "mere exposure effect" tendency to have more positive responses to something just be repeat exposure.
  • 2. Social and Political judgements are especially intuitive
  • Affective Priming - flashing word pairs with dissonance: "flower - happiness" vs. "hate - sunshine"
  • Implicit Association Test Project Implicit
  • Flashing word pairs with political terms causes dissonance. measurable delay in response when, say, conservatives read "Clinton" and "sunshine". Dissonance is pain.
  • Todorov's work extending "attractiveness" advantage to snap judgements. "Competency" judgments of political candidates correct 2/3 of time. Judgements of competence. note speed of judgement .1 of a second.(59)
  • 3. Bodies guide judgements --Fart Spray exaggerates moral judgements (!); Zhong: hand washing before and after moral judgements. Helzer and Pizarro: standing near a sanitizer strengthens conservatism.
  • 4. Psychopaths: reason but don't feel - Transcript from Robert Hare research
  • 5. Babies: feel but don't reason; Helper and hinder puppets. The babies are thinking with concepts...system 1.

Tomasello - "Human Morality as Cooperation Plus" (143-157; 14)

  • Note: The text has a couple of pages at the end from a different part of the book. This material summarizes some of the early childhood research that Tomasello uses to support his theory.
  • Diffs bt US and other primates:
  • Great apes are "instrumentally rational"; mostly competitive, some friendships, not a lot of helping.
  • Chimps and bonobos don't use structured cooperation, don't exclude freeriders, no concept of fairness.
  • Hypothesis: We (400K ago) were forced to develop a cooperative rationality that included concern for the well being of the partner, then group. Values this explains: mutual respect, fairness, exclusion of free riders, allowance for "2nd person protest" ("Hey, you said you would..."). From there a collective intentionality that recognizes right and wrong as having an objective status.
  • 147: Paraphrased from "Rather.." Morality doesn't develop just by assessing the rational costs for individuals involved, but it might develop if we recognized our dependency on partners and the group. Relationships involve "investment", not just "payoffs" (as in game theory models).
  • Cooperation in reciprocal altruism models is fragile. Someone is always ready to make a sucker out of you and then cooperation goes to zero.
  • Interdependence cultivates genuine concern for the partner, shared intentionality, self-other equivalence (of roles), "deservingness".
  • Ontogeny - how something comes to be.
  • Digression from text: "Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" - meaning "This phrase suggests that an organism's development will take it through each of the adult stages of its evolutionary history, or its phylogeny. [2]. Distinguish from the philosophy field: Ontology.
  • Contemporary children pass through two stages similar to the stage of the theory (2nd person morality and joint commitment). read at 155. The extra pages are from C3, which he mentions as providing evidence. See summary box at end of pdf.
  • prior to age 3, no recognition of social norms, but after, they will engage in 3rd party punishment.
  • Go through text boxes from Chapter 3 at the end of the pdf.

Giving Peer Criticism

  • Some thoughts on helpful peer commenting:
  • You are only asked to write two or three sentences of comments, so choose wisely! Your back evaluation score will be assessed on this.
  • Giving the kind of criticism that you would want to consider if it were your paper.
  • Give gentle criticisms that focus on your experience as a reader:
  • "I'm having trouble understanding this sentence" NOT "This sentence makes no sense!"
  • "I think more attention could have been paid to X NOT "You totally ignored the prompt!
  • Wrap a criticism with an affirmation or positive comment
  • "You cover the prompt pretty well, but you might have said more about x (or, I found y a bit of a digression)"
  • "Some interesting discussion here, esp about x, but you didn't address the prompt very completely ...."
  • General and specific -- Ok to identify general problem with the writing, but giving examples of the problem or potential solutions.
  • I found some of your sentences hard to follow. E.g. "I think that the main ...." was a bit redundant.
  • I thought the flow was generally good, but in paragraph 2 the second and third sentence seem to go in different directions.

Utilitarianism - Additional notes

  • Let's meet Jeremy Bentham. [3]
  • Brief historical intro to utilitarians: Early industrial society, "social statics" (early efforts to measure social conditions). Utilitarians were seen as reformers.
  • Fundamental consequentialist intuition: Most of what's important about morality can be seen in outcomes of our actions that promote happiness and human well-being.
  • Basic principles of utilitarian thought:
  • Equal Happiness Principle: Everyone's happiness matters to them as much as mine does to me. Everyone's interests have equal weight. (Note this is a rational principle. Emotionally, it's false. Utilitarian thinking often involves overcoming a System 1 automatic (evolved) preference.)
  • Note on method: this is a way to universalize. Recall earlier discussion about conditions for ethical discourse. Ethics is about figuring out when we need to take a moral concern about something and, if we do, then we take on constraint (conversational): universalizability, equality of interests. (Note that also get to this result from Tomasello and Wrangham.)
  • Principle of Utility: Act always so that you promote the greatest good for the greatest number.
  • Hedonic version: Act to promote the greatest pleasure ...
  • Classical utilitarian: greatest balance of range of qualitatively diverse pleasures and aspects of well-being. More wholistic.
  • Preference utilitarian version: Act to maximally fulfill our interest in acting on our preferences. (Very compatibile with neo-liberal economic thinking.)
  • But what is utility? What is a preference?
  • Utility: pleasure, what is useful, happiness, well-being.
  • Is the utilitarian committed to maximizing happiness of individuals directly? A utilitarian focused on promoting utility, might still acknowledge that promoting human happiness is mostly about protecting conditions for an individual's autonomous pursuit of happiness. Consider cases: When does promoting the greater good involve letting people make their own decisions vs. managing or regulating an issue centrally?
  • Conditions for the pursuit of happiness: Order, stability, opportunity, education, health, rights, liberty.
  • Issue of protection of rights in utilitarian thought.
  • Preferences:
  • An indirect way to solve the problem of lack of agreement about goods. Let's maximize opportunities for people to express their preferences. Positive: pushing the question of the good life to the individual. Negative: High levels of individualism may reduce social trust. Lack of action on opportunities to reduce suffering.
  • But sometimes we ought to override preferences: Thought experiment: Returning a gun to an angry person. Is the angry person's preference one that has to count? People "prefer" to live in a way that is heating up the planet!
  • Cultural contradictions in our preferences: we prefer health, but we also "prefer" to eat the western diet, smoke things, and drink alcohol. Which preferences should the utilitarian focus on? Some preferences are based on bias or prejudice.

Group Discussion: Assessing Utilitarianism

  • Consider applying utilitarianism to different kinds of moral problems (from interpersonal ethics to public policy questions). Identify three situations in which you would want to use utilitarianism and three situations in which you would not.

Churchland C4 – “Norms and Values” – (96-110; 14)

  • This chapter is about how the reward structures in the brain work similarly for social and non-social tasks. This gives us a glimpse of the neurobiology of everyday ethics. Getting norms and values right (learning them, showing them in your behavior, calling others out, moral shunning) involves the same reward system as non-social tasks, like finding a job or any search problems (getting a good deal on something, etc.)
  • 100: The knowledge domains for social and non-social tasks are distinct. (Social knowledge tells me whether to make noisily slurping noises while eating noodles. Other knowledge helps me know that I should wait to split my wood till it is dry.
  • Applies to emotionally negative situations, like giving negative appraisal. For this, we use empathy. (More on empathy soon. You can think of it both as a way of acquiring knowledge about others’ experience and maintaining social bonds during emotionally negative situations (physical and mental suffering, failures to meet expectations, etc.).
  • Churchland’s take on the Ultimatum Game research findings. Typically, we say this research shows that we are not strictly rational as Responder. But, Churchland suggests there might be a “social rationality” . Also culturally variable. P. 105. Cites Henrich, market integration may be a variable (measured as: how much of your food do you get from the store).
  • Really complicated Ultimatum Game research. roughly, norm changes are affected by both conscious and unconcscious (Sys 2 and 1) neural processes. Fashion as example of relatively unconscious cultural process. Norms that have changed this way: breastfeeding, recycling, sexually orientation.
  • What is happening in the brain during moral experience? We are getting rewarding or not based on lots of social knowledge and cues from others.