In the last decades, research in cognitive psychology and neuroscience fueled a rich debate about i) the main mechanisms underlying human (moral) decision-making and ii) their reliability. In this paper, I first make clear that the emotion/reason distinction should be set aside, although this does not imply casting doubt on dual-process models in general. To support this idea, I discuss a dual-process framework for moral decision-making informed by computational models of reinforcement learning. I finally consider some normative implications of this research, stressing their procedural, rather than substantive, nature.

Models of moral decision-making: Recent advances and normative relevance

Bina F.
2022-01-01

Abstract

In the last decades, research in cognitive psychology and neuroscience fueled a rich debate about i) the main mechanisms underlying human (moral) decision-making and ii) their reliability. In this paper, I first make clear that the emotion/reason distinction should be set aside, although this does not imply casting doubt on dual-process models in general. To support this idea, I discuss a dual-process framework for moral decision-making informed by computational models of reinforcement learning. I finally consider some normative implications of this research, stressing their procedural, rather than substantive, nature.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1219460
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