*What is the nature of human morality?*

Prof Michael Tomasello (Leipzig)
Prof Shaun Nichols (Arizona)

Thursday, 12 March 2015, 5:00-6:30pm
Room SG1 (Ground Floor), Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road
The event includes presentations by the speakers, discussion and Q&A. It
will be followed by a wine reception in the atrium.

Prof Shaun Nichols is happy to meet researchers for an informal chat during
the day. If you would like to meet him individually, please sign up to a
time slot here: https://doodle.com/gkwmt9dfs88emis9. Meetings take place in
the atrium at CRASSH.

Abstracts

Prof Tomasello:
Human morality is a form of cooperation, specifically, the form that has
emerged as humans have adapted to new and species-unique forms of social
interaction and organisation. Because Homo sapiens is an ultra-cooperative
species, and presumably the only moral one, we assume that human morality
comprises the key set of species-unique proximate mechanisms -
psychological processes of cognition, social interaction, and
self-regulation - that enable human individuals to survive and thrive in
their especially cooperative social arrangements. Given these assumptions,
the attempt is: (i) to specify in as much detail as possible, based mainly
on experimental research, how the cooperation of humans differs from that
of their nearest primate relatives; and (ii) to construct a plausible
evolutionary scenario - comprising two steps, one based in concrete
collaborative activities and the other in larger-scale processes of culture
- for how such uniquely human cooperation gave rise to human morality. A
key at both steps will be humans' ability to engage with others in acts of
shared intentionality involving a plural agent 'we'.

Prof Nichols:
Philosophical observation and psychological studies indicate that people
draw subtle distinctions in the normative domain.  But it remains unclear
exactly what gives rise to such distinctions. On one prominent approach,
emotion systems trigger non-utilitarian judgments. The main alternative,
inspired by Chomskyan linguistics, suggests that moral distinctions derive
from an innate moral grammar. We develop a rational learning account. We
argue that the “size principle”, which is implicated in word learning (Xu &
Tenenbaum 2007), can also explain how children would use scant and
equivocal evidence to interpret candidate rules as applying more narrowly
than utilitarian rules.

*About the speakers:*

Professor Michael Tomasello studies the origins of our capacity for social
cognition, cooperation and communication from a developmental and
evolutionary perspective. He is co-director of the Max Planck Institute for
Evolutionary Anthropology, co-director of the Wolfgang Kohler Primate
Research Centre, and author of seven books (including, most recently, Why
We Cooperate and A Natural History of Human Thinking) and over 100
articles, including publications in Science and Nature. Prof Tomasello’s
current interest is on shared intentionality – the capacity to coordinate
our actions to cooperate towards some common goal. He has proposed that
this capacity, and the cognitive architecture underlying it, may be the
crucial feature of human cognition that renders us unique among species.

Shaun Nichols is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona. A
pioneer of the emerging discipline of ‘experimental philosophy’, Prof
Nichols is interested in the psychological processes underlying our
everyday moral intuitions, moral reasoning and moral decision-making – and
in how understanding these processes can shed light on classic and
contemporary questions in morality and ethics. More specifically, his
research has brought an empirically-informed lens to bear on a range of
philosophical questions including free will, moral responsibility and
blameworthiness, and notions of self and personal identity. He is author of
three edited volumes and two books (Sentimental Rules and Mindreading), and
has been published in such prestigious journals as Mind and Language and
the Journal of Philosophy.

We look forward to seeing you soon,

Moral Psychology Research Group

This event is part of a series of biweekly interdisciplinary debates in
moral psychology (http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/programmes/moral-psychology).
Sign up to be notified of future events here:
http://talks.cam.ac.uk/show/index/50108.
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