AI Article Synopsis

  • Metaethical judgments explore how we understand moral claims, with objectivists viewing them as facts and subjectivists seeing them as preferences.
  • Research using behavioral and neuroimaging methods indicates that people perceive morals more like preferences than facts, with both evoking similar brain activity patterns, particularly in the dorsal-medial prefrontal cortex (DMPFC), which is key for social cognition.
  • The findings suggest morals are more subjective than previously thought, aligning with theories that emphasize morality as a tool for managing social relationships.

Article Abstract

Metaethical judgments refer to judgments about the information expressed by moral claims. Moral objectivists generally believe that moral claims are akin to facts, whereas moral subjectivists generally believe that moral claims are more akin to preferences. Evidence from developmental and social psychology has generally favored an objectivist view; however, this work has typically relied on few examples, and analyses have disallowed statistical generalizations beyond these few stimuli. The present work addresses whether morals are represented as fact-like or preference-like, using behavioral and neuroimaging methods, in combination with statistical techniques that can (a) generalize beyond our sample stimuli, and (b) test whether particular item features are associated with neural activity. Behaviorally, and contrary to prior work, morals were perceived as more preference-like than fact-like. Neurally, morals and preferences elicited common magnitudes and spatial patterns of activity, particularly within the dorsal-medial prefrontal cortex (DMPFC), a critical region for social cognition. This common DMPFC activity for morals and preferences was present across whole-brain conjunctions, and in individually localized functional regions of interest (targeting the theory of mind network). By contrast, morals and facts did not elicit any neural activity in common. Follow-up item analyses suggested that the activity elicited in common by morals and preferences was explained by their shared tendency to evoke representations of mental states. We conclude that morals are represented as far more subjective than prior work has suggested. This conclusion is consistent with recent theoretical research, which has argued that morality is fundamentally about regulating social relationships. (PsycINFO Database Record

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xge0000350DOI Listing

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