[Cross-posted at MOJ] On the way home, I heard an interesting NPR story on brain imaging and moral judgment. Here's how it starts:
A person's moral judgments can be
changed almost instantly by
delivering a magnetic pulse to an area of the brain near the right ear,
according to a study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences. People in the study read stories designed to
produce moral judgments. One such story begins with a woman named Grace
putting powder in her friend's coffee. After that, the story can go in
several different directions. In one version, Grace believes
she's putting sugar in her friend's coffee. But it turns out to be
poison and her friend dies. In another version, Grace believes she's
putting poison in the coffee but it turns out to be sugar and her friend
is fine. People who hear these stories generally forgive Grace
for unwittingly poisoning her friend, says Liane Young, a researcher in
the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. And, she says, they usually condemn Grace for
the failed attempt to do harm.
Here's a description of the scientists' manipulation:
Young and her colleagues used a
technique called transcranial
magnetic stimulation, or TMS, to temporarily decrease activity in an
area of the brain called the right temporoparietal junction. It's near
the surface of the brain, above and behind the right ear, and it seems
to helps us decipher another person's beliefs. Twenty volunteers
got TMS before or during the time they were listening to stories like
the one about Grace and the coffee. The stimulation caused people to pay
less attention to Grace's intention and more attention to the outcome,
Young says. "If no harm was done, then subjects would judge
[Grace's behavior] as OK," she says, even if the story made it clear
Grace was trying to poison her friend. That's the sort of moral judgment
you often see in kids who are 3 or 4 years old, Young says.
I took this to suggest that strictly consequentialist moral reasoning is a sign of either (1) moral immaturity or (2) mental impairment. NPR's "expert," however, read the results somewhat differently:
"Moral judgment is just a brain
process," [Harvard psychologist Joshua Greene] says. "That's precisely
why
it's possible for these researchers to influence it using
electromagnetic pulses on the surface of the brain." . . . If something
as complex as morality has a mechanical explanation, Green
says, it will be hard to argue that people have, or need, a soul.
A number of economists, in search of big problems to solve, and politicians, looking for bold promises to make, think that it ought to be doing something else: making people happy.
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