Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Preferences
2. Responsibility
3. Emotion
4. Character
5. Disagreement
Afterward
References
Glossary
Index
Mark Alfano is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Princeton University Center for Human Values and Center for Health and Wellbeing.
"Moral Psychology is a first-rate contribution to philosophy and a
pedagogical tour de force, a fantastic gift to scholars working in
ethics and moral psychology and to our students. Alfano is wickedly
smart, in complete control of all the philosophical and empirical
literature in moral psychology, and writes in crystal-clear,
inviting prose. The study questions are amazing challenges to think
hard, often personally, about implicit bias, one's own and one's
loved ones' trustworthiness, emotions, character, relativism, and
the significance of morality to a good life. Simply
outstanding."
—Owen Flanagan, Duke University "Accessibly written, though far
from being a mere survey, this book is at once a concise
and in the best sense idiosyncratic introduction to some
recent findings in empirical moral psychology and an argued account
of the relationship between those findings and moral
philosophy."
—Edward Harcourt, University of Oxford "There is much to like about
this book, and I highly recommend it. It is particularly suitable
as a textbook for courses on moral psychology (entry level or
advanced), but even researchers working in the field will find many
interesting thoughts and stimulating insights."
—Ethical Theory and Moral Practice "Mark Alfano's Moral Psychology
is an exciting and challenging introduction to the interface
between philosophical ethics and the empirical sciences."
—Scott Forrest Aikin, Philosophy
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