Human Morality Is Based on an Early-Emerging Moral Core

Author:

Woo Brandon M.1,Tan Enda2,Hamlin J. Kiley3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA;

2. Department of Human Development and Quantitative Methodology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA;

3. Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;

Abstract

Scholars from across the social sciences, biological sciences, and humanities have long emphasized the role of human morality in supporting cooperation. How does morality arise in human development? One possibility is that morality is acquired through years of socialization and active learning. Alternatively, morality may instead be based on a “moral core”: primitive abilities that emerge in infancy to make sense of morally relevant behaviors. Here, we review evidence that infants and toddlers understand a variety of morally relevant behaviors and readily evaluate agents who engage in them. These abilities appear to be rooted in the goals and intentions driving agents’ morally relevant behaviors and are sensitive to group membership. This evidence is consistent with a moral core, which may support later social and moral development and ultimately be leveraged for human cooperation.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Insect Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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1. Moral Improvement of Self, Social Relations, and Society;Annual Review of Psychology;2024-01-18

2. Preschoolers' retrospective and prospective judgements of immanent justice following distributive actions;British Journal of Developmental Psychology;2024-01-03

3. Toddlers’ affective responses to sociomoral scenes: Insights from physiological measures;Journal of Experimental Child Psychology;2024-01

4. The Representation of Third-Party Helping Interactions in Infancy;Annual Review of Developmental Psychology;2023-12-11

5. Children's Acquisition and Application of Norms;Annual Review of Developmental Psychology;2023-12-11

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