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Moral Judgment Fails Without Feelings
Consider the following scenario: someone you know
has AIDS and plans to infect others, some of whom will die. Your
only options are to let it happen or to kill the person.
Do you pull the trigger?
Most people waver or say they could not, even if they agree that
in theory they should. But according to a new study in the journal
Nature, subjects with damage to a part of the frontal lobe make
a less personal calculation.
The logical choice, they say, is to sacrifice one life to save
many.
Conducted by researchers at the University of Southern California,
Harvard University, Caltech and the University of Iowa, the study
shows that emotion plays an important role in scenarios that pose
a moral dilemma.
If certain emotions are blocked, we make decisions that -- right
or wrong -- seem unnaturally cold.
The scenarios in the study are extreme, but the core dilemma
is not: should one confront a co-worker, challenge a neighbor,
or scold a loved one in the interest of the greater good?
A total of 30 subjects of both genders faced a set of scenarios
pitting immediate harm to one person against future certain harm
to many. Six had damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex
(VMPC), a small region behind the forehead, while 12 had brain
damage elsewhere, and another 12 had no damage.
The subjects with VMPC damage stood out in their stated willingness
to harm an individual -- a prospect that usually generates strong
aversion.
"Because of their brain damage, they have abnormal social
emotions in real life. They lack empathy and compassion,"
said Ralph Adolphs, Bren Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience
at Caltech.
"In those circumstances most people without this specific
brain damage will be torn. But these particular subjects seem
to lack that conflict," said co-senior author Antonio Damasio,
director of the Brain and Creativity Institute and holder of the
David Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience at USC.
"Our work provides the first causal account of the role
of emotions in moral judgments," said co-senior author Marc
Hauser, professor of psychology at Harvard and Harvard College
Professor.
But, Hauser added, not all moral reasoning depends so strongly
on emotion.
"What is absolutely astonishing about our results is how
selective the deficit is," he said. "Damage to the frontal
lobe leaves intact a suite of moral problem solving abilities,
but damages judgments in which an aversive action is put into
direct conflict with a strong utilitarian outcome."
It is the feeling of aversion that normally blocks humans from
harming each other. Damasio described it as "a combination
of rejection of the act, but combined with the social emotion
of compassion for that particular person."
"The question is, are the social emotions necessary to make
these moral judgments," Adolphs asked.
The study's answer will inform a classic philosophical debate
on whether humans make moral judgments based on norms and societal
rules, or based on their emotions.
The study holds another implication for philosophy.
By showing that humans are neurologically unfit for strict utilitarian
thinking, the study suggests that neuroscience may be able to
test different philosophies for compatibility with human nature.
The Nature study expands on work on emotion and decision-making
that Damasio began in the early 1990s and that caught the public
eye in his first book, Descartes' Error.
Marc Hauser, whose behavioral work in animals has attempted to
identify precursors to moral behavior, then teamed up with Damasio's
group to extend those observations.
Other authors on the study were Fiery Cushman and Liane Young
of Harvard, and Michael Koenigs and Daniel Tranel of the University
of Iowa.
Funding for the research came from the National Institutes of
Health, the National Science Foundation, the Gordon and Betty
Moore Foundation, and the Guggenheim Foundation.
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