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Against moral judgment. The empirical case for moral abolitionism

Hanno Sauer

2021Philosophical Explorations18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this paper, I argue that recent evidence regarding the psychological basis of moral cognition supports a form of (moderate) moral abolitionism. I identify three main problems undermining the epistemic quality of our moral judgments – contamination, reliability, and bad incentives – and reject three possible responses: neither moral expertise, nor moral learning, nor the possibility of moral progress succeed in solving the aforementioned epistemic problems. The result is a moderate form of moral abolitionism, according to which we should make fewer moral judgments much more carefully.

Topics & Concepts

AbolitionismMoral disengagementSocial cognitive theory of moralityPsychologyMoral psychologyMoral reasoningEpistemologySocial psychologyIncentiveQuality (philosophy)Moral developmentPhilosophyLawPolitical sciencePoliticsEconomicsMicroeconomicsPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentEthics in Business and EducationEmotions and Moral Behavior
Against moral judgment. The empirical case for moral abolitionism | Litcius