
Moral Psychology and the Art of Not Believing Your Own Results
Philosopher Bry Willis examines the modern shift in moral psychology, which argues that human beings prioritise instinctual emotions over logical deliberation when making ethical judgements. The author critiques several foundational books in the field, noting a contradiction where researchers prove that reasoning is a secondary, defensive tool, yet still suggest rational dialogue as a solution to social conflict. By using the metaphor of an elephant and a rider, the source illustrates that our subconscious drives dictate our direction while our conscious minds merely justify the path. This analysis suggests that deep-seated moral disagreements may be structural and immune to factual persuasion, a reality currently exploited by social media and political framing. Ultimately, the author warns that continuing to rely on Enlightenment-era rationalism ignores the scientific evidence of our inherently tribal and intuitive nature.
👉 https://philosophics.blog/2026/01/21/moral-psychology-critique/
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