TY - JOUR
T1 - Jesus and Hume among the neuroscientists
T2 - Haidt, Greene, and the unwitting return of moral sense theory
AU - Perry, John
PY - 2016/6/17
Y1 - 2016/6/17
N2 - The latest trend in ethics, sometimes dismissed as a fad, is the effort to connect ethics to empirical science. Two different versions of this “latest thing” can be found in the work of Jonathan Haidt and Joshua Greene. Their projects are, at least partly, unwitting recoveries of eighteenth-century Christian moral sense theory. Such similarities need not worry Christian ethicists but should instead inspire a careful retrieval of sentimentalism. It provides much of what today’s empirical ethicists hope to deliver without the pitfalls.
AB - The latest trend in ethics, sometimes dismissed as a fad, is the effort to connect ethics to empirical science. Two different versions of this “latest thing” can be found in the work of Jonathan Haidt and Joshua Greene. Their projects are, at least partly, unwitting recoveries of eighteenth-century Christian moral sense theory. Such similarities need not worry Christian ethicists but should instead inspire a careful retrieval of sentimentalism. It provides much of what today’s empirical ethicists hope to deliver without the pitfalls.
U2 - 10.1353/sce.2016.0022
DO - 10.1353/sce.2016.0022
M3 - Article
SN - 1540-7942
VL - 36
SP - 69
EP - 85
JO - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics
JF - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics
IS - 1
ER -