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utsfl:classroom:seminars:pbh310 [2024/03/26 19:01] – moral dumbfounding idea balleyne | utsfl:classroom:seminars:pbh310 [2025/02/12 16:12] (current) – [Part 2: Six Taste Receptors] fixed a typo balleyne | ||
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====== PBH310: Moral Psychology & Abortion ====== | ====== PBH310: Moral Psychology & Abortion ====== | ||
- | Introduction (XVII-XIX): | + | ===== Introduction |
- | > I study moral psychology, and I'm going to make the case that morality is the extraordinary human capacity that made civilization possible. [...] The human mind is designed to " | + | ==== Heart Apologetics & Moral Psychology ==== |
+ | Apologetics is about effective communication and persuasion, fundamentally about rhetoric | ||
- | Summary | + | But effective apologetics is not purely cerebral. Aristotle says that effective communication is ethos, pathos, and logos: build a bridge, touch the heart, then deliver the message. We need to not just win a debate, but to truly reach the person to be effective in apologetics - to change both the heart and the mind. |
- | > This book has three parts, which you can think of as three separate books—except | + | |
+ | That's where heart apologetics comes in: Heart apologetics is about the emotional layer of apologetics, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Note that moral psychology is about how the mind // | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== The Righteous Mind ==== | ||
+ | For a guide through the field of moral psychology, I'm going to turn to Jonathan Haidt - whose name you'll see all over the Wikipedia article on [[wp>Moral Psychology]] - and his landmark 2012 book //The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided By Politics and Religion,// which draws on 25 years of groundbreaking research and which, I think, is full of wisdom for pro-life activists | ||
+ | |||
+ | (Share some of my 2020-2024 journey in thinking about this.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | I'm going to pull out the core insights from Haidt' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Part 1: The Elephant and the Rider ===== | ||
+ | ==== Activate moral intuitions ==== | ||
+ | (Show, don't tell, that moral intuitions come first.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | Haidt opens the first chapter by asking the reader to consider this story, and whether or not the people in it did anything morally wrong: | ||
+ | > A family' | ||
+ | :?: Did the people in the story do anything morally wrong? | ||
+ | |||
+ | Or take this story: | ||
+ | > A woman is cleaning out her closet and she finds her old American flag. She doesn' | ||
+ | :?: Did the woman do anything wrong? | ||
+ | |||
+ | Haidt constructed many stories((p. 22, typically focused on disgust and disrespect)) in his studies to produce a kind of moral dumbfounding ("I //know// it's wrong, but I can't explain why..." | ||
+ | * The well-educated people in Haidt' | ||
+ | * But if you're not a liberal Westerner, like most people on the planet, you believe: "Some actions are morally wrong even if they don't hurt anyone" | ||
+ | * People would invent victims, like "what if someone saw her do it?" One kid said, "well the flag might clog up the toilet and cause it to overflow," | ||
+ | * **Moral reasoning is often the servant of moral emotions. Gut feelings can sometimes drive moral reasoning. Moral reasoning is sometimes a post hoc fabrication.** | ||
+ | * More on the particular moral feelings in part 2, but for now, let's think about the method here: intuitions first, reasoning second | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Elephants Rule ==== | ||
+ | Through much of his research, Haidt found that: **Intuitions come first, strategic reasoning second.** He sums this up with his analogy of the elephant and the rider. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Stop at 2:02 | ||
+ | {{youtube> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Jonathan Haidt illustrates this with a personal example: | ||
+ | > On February 3, 2007, shortly before lunch, I discovered that I was a chronic liar. I was at home, writing a review article on moral psychology, when my wife, Jayne, walked by my desk. In passing, she asked me not to leave dirty dishes on the counter where she prepared our baby's food. Her request was polite but its tone added a postscript: "As I have asked you a hundred times before." | ||
> | > | ||
- | > Part I is about the first principle: // | + | > My mouth started moving before hears had stopped. Words came out. Those words linked themselves up to say something about the baby having woken up at the same time that our elderly dog barked to ask for a walk and I'm sorry but I just put my breakfast dishes down where I could. In my family, caring for a hungry baby and an incontinent dog is a surefire excuse, so I was acquitted. |
+ | > | ||
+ | > Jayne left the room and I continued working. I was writing | ||
+ | |||
+ | It's the **moral flash** I want you to recognize, your moral intuitions. This is your elephant. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Think about your own experience, talking | ||
+ | |||
+ | In study after study, Haidt finds that moral judgment | ||
+ | |||
+ | **Does this not match our experience talking to people | ||
+ | |||
+ | Haidt puts the elephant and rider into more academic terms with the social intuitionist model. | ||
+ | ==== The Social Intuitionist Model ==== | ||
+ | This is an academic, evidence-based explanation of heart apologetics, | ||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | (Walk through each of the arrows, one by one.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | :!: Haidt talks about the application of the social intuitionist model for moral persuasion: | ||
+ | > The social intuitionist model offers an explanation of why moral and political arguments are so frustrating: | ||
+ | |||
+ | **Therefore, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Haidt offers a lot of insight into the dynamic of moral debates with this model, and the elephant and the rider analogy, and how to be persuasive and avoid fuelling motivated reasoning: | ||
+ | |||
+ | > When does the elephant listen to reason? The main way that we change our minds on moral issues is by interacting with other people. We are terrible at seeking evidence that challenges our own beliefs, but other people do us this favour, just as we are quite good at finding error's in other people' | ||
> | > | ||
- | >The central metaphor of these four chapters | + | > But if there is affection, admiration, or a desire to please |
> | > | ||
- | > Part II is about the second principle of moral psychology, which is that //there' | + | > These are even times when we change our minds on our own, with no help from other people. Sometimes we have conflicting intuitions |
+ | > | ||
+ | > And finally, it is possible for people simply to reason their way to a moral conclusion | ||
+ | |||
+ | In studies on IQ and moral psychology, they found that IQ was by far the biggest predictor of how well people argued, but it predicted | ||
+ | |||
+ | On motivated reasoning: | ||
+ | > The social psychologist Tom Gilovich studies the cognitive mechanisms | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > In contrast, when we //don' | ||
+ | |||
+ | Now, Haidt says that elephants | ||
+ | * In a lawyer/ | ||
+ | * In a healthy relationship, | ||
+ | |||
+ | For pro-life activism: | ||
+ | * Reflecting on our own elephant is hugely helpful for developing //empathy// for other people's elephants, if we can become aware of the elephant/ | ||
+ | * When we are speaking to other people, we need to be conscious of //speaking to the elephant and not the rider// if we want to be persuasive and reach the whole person | ||
+ | |||
+ | And this leads into the second half, on how we can apply further lessons from moral psychology on how to be persuasive to other people' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Part 2: Six Taste Receptors ===== | ||
+ | The first principle in moral psychology is that "intuitions | ||
+ | |||
+ | < | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Beyond WEIRD Morality ==== | ||
+ | Jonathan Haidt rights as a secular liberal, breaking out of his liberal university bubbles and broadening his understanding of moral psychology by developing a better understanding | ||
+ | |||
+ | In particular, he cites a lot of research | ||
+ | |||
+ | He posed scenarios like the dog meat and flag rag, but also this one: | ||
+ | > A man goes to the supermarket once a week and buys a chicken. But before cooking the chicken, he has sexual intercourse with it. Then he cooks it and eats it. | ||
+ | |||
+ | He opens Part II like this((p. 111-112)): | ||
+ | > I got my Ph.D. at McDonald' | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > But what I didn't expect was that these working-class subjects would sometimes find my request for justifications so perplexing. Each time someone said that the people in a story had done something wrong, I asked, "Can you tell me why that was wrong?" | ||
> | > | ||
- | > Part II is about the third principle: //Morality binds and blinds//. The central metaphor of these four chapters is that //human beings are 90 percent chimp and 10 percent bee.// Human nature | + | > These subjects were right to wonder |
> | > | ||
- | > But human nature was also shaped | + | > The Penn students were just as likely as people in the other elevn groups |
+ | |||
+ | This is WEIRD morality, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Jonathan Haidt goes on a journey to India and outside of WEIRD cultures to discover and study the descriptive reality of moral plurialism, that this WEIRD way of viewing morality really is weird and doesn' | ||
+ | > I also began to understand why the American culture wars involved so many battles over sacrilege. Is a flag just a piece of cloth, which can be burned as a form of protest? Or does each flag contain within it something nonmaterial such that when protesters burn it, they have done something bad (even if nobody were to see them do it)? When an artist submerges | ||
> | > | ||
- | > Once you see our righteous minds as primate minds with a hivish overlay, you get a whole new perspective on morality, politics, and religion. I'll show that our " | + | > If you can' |
- | ===== The Elephant and the Rider ===== | + | **The second principle in moral psychology |
- | * Moral reasoning is often the servant of moral emotions. Gut feelings can sometimes drive moral reasoning. Moral reasoning | + | |
- | | + | |
- | * Can I use moral dumbfounding examples for religious conservatives? | + | |
- | Stop at 2:02 | + | ==== Moral Foundations Theory ==== |
- | {{youtube>24adApYh0yc}} | + | After breaking out of the WEIRD matrix, Haidt and his team starting doing a ton of research on what came to be known as [[wp> |
+ | |||
+ | - Care/Harm: sensitivity to signs of suffering and need, despising cruelty, feeling compassion and desire to protect individuals from harm | ||
+ | * Liberal: e.g. vegan activists, "stop the genocide", | ||
+ | * Conservative: | ||
+ | - Liberty/ | ||
+ | * liberals are most concerned about the rights of vulnerable groups, and they look to government to defend the weak against oppression by the strong. Conservatives, | ||
+ | - Fairness/ | ||
+ | * Conservatives care more, and they rely on the fairness foundation more heavily (in terms of proportionality) | ||
+ | * Liberals are often uncomfortable with the negative side of [proportionality] - retribution ("an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind" | ||
+ | - Loyalty/ | ||
+ | - Authority/ | ||
+ | * The political right more often builds on the loyalty foundation | ||
+ | * The political left more often values disobedience, | ||
+ | - Sanctity/ | ||
+ | * biologically linked to avoidance of disease and pathogens, powered by " | ||
+ | * conversely, it's what we find to be **sacred** - when we //value// and what //binds us together//; "Why do people readily treat objects (flags, crosses), places (Mecca, a battlefield related to the birth of your nation), people (saints, heroes), and principles (liberty, fraternity, equality) as though they were of infinite value? Whatever its origins, the psychology of sacredness **helps bind individuals into moral communities.** When someone in a moral community desecrates one of the sacred pillars supporting the community, the reaction is sure to be swift, emotional, collective, and punitive." | ||
+ | * e.g. Chastity as a virtue of purity, vs "your body may be a temple, but mine's an amusement park" bumper sticker | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Three vs Six ==== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Conclusion((p. 212-214)) - maybe just read the bolded part, but use the matrices image to visualize while explaining: | ||
+ | > Moral Foundations Theory says that there are (at least) six psychological systems that comprise the universal foundations of the world' | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > Everyone - left, right, or centre - cares about Care/harm, but liberals care more. Across many scales, surveys, and political controversies, | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > Everyone - left, right, and center - cares about liberty/ | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > The fairness/ | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > The remaining three foundations - loyalty/ | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > **Liberals have a three-foundation morality, whereas conservatives use all six. Liberal moral matrices rest on the care/harm, liberty/ | ||
+ | |||
+ | This is the second principle in moral psychology: **there' | ||
+ | |||
+ | So what do we do then with these findings to be more effective pro-life activists? **We need to keep these taste receptors in mind as we speak to elephants** (e.g. why do we focus so much in the pro-life message on care/harm and liberty/ | ||
+ | |||
+ | Finally, we turn to the third principle in moral psychology to develop deeper empathy, and learn a few more lessons that are relevant for heart apologetics and for the pro-life movement more broadly. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Part 3: The Hive Switch ===== | ||
+ | <note warning> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In Part III of the book, Haidt explores a lot of studies and a lot of evolutionary biology to make the point, from a descriptive, | ||
+ | |||
+ | The chimp part makes sense, as we share like 98% of our DNA with chimpanzees. But bees? | ||
+ | |||
+ | While our similarities to chimpanzees can explain a lot of our selfishness from an evolutionary biology perspective, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Haidt tells the story of the burst of patriotism he experienced in the wake of 9/11, despite being an unpatriotic liberal((p. 219)): | ||
+ | > In the terrible days after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, I felt an urge so primitive I was embarrassed to admit it to my friends: I wanted to put an American flag decal on my car. | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > The urge seemed to come out of nowhere, with no connection to anything I'd ever done. It was as if there was an ancient alarm box in the back of my brain with a sign on it that said, "In case of foreign attack, break glass and push button." | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > But I was a professor, and professors don't do such things. Flag waving and nationalism are for conservatives. Professors are liberal globetrotting universalists, | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > After three days and a welter of feelings I"d never felt before, I found a solution to my dilemma. I put an American flag in one corner of my rear windshield, and I put the United Nations flag in the opposite corner. That way I could announce that I loved my country, but don't worry, folks, I don't place it above other countries, and this was, after all, an attack on the whole world, sort of, right? | ||
+ | |||
+ | This switch into group mode, Jonathan Haidt calls The Hive Switch. We are 90 percent chimp and 10 percent bee. He says, "we are selfish primates who long to be part of something larger and nobler than ourselves." | ||
+ | * religious experience/ | ||
+ | * awe in nature | ||
+ | * a sports stadium | ||
+ | * a rock concert | ||
+ | * a meaningful and challenging experience that builds community (like a summer internship or tour) | ||
+ | |||
+ | FIXME example: https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | Collective ritual - Haidt says that human beings are // | ||
+ | |||
+ | When this hive switch is activated, this leads to the third principle in moral psychology: **morality binds and blinds.** That is, the Hive Switch //binds// us together in community. But, it also //blinds// us beyond the in-group. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Binding ==== | ||
+ | < | ||
+ | On community-building | ||
+ | * Muscular bonding in warfare (acting as a unit in a whole), but also sports and raves, etc | ||
+ | * Oxytocin simply makes people love their in-group more | ||
+ | * Ways to nudge everyone' | ||
+ | * **Increase similarity, not diversity.** [connect with religious idea bundling] To make a human hive, you want to make everyone feel like a family. So don't call attention to racial and ethnic differences; | ||
+ | * **Exploit synchrony: | ||
+ | * **Create healthy competition among teams, not individuals.** As McNeill said, soldiers don't risk their lives for their country or for the army; they do so for their buddies in the same squad or platoon. Studies show that intergroup competition increases love of the in-group far more than it increases dislike of the out-group. Intergroup competitions, | ||
+ | |||
+ | But also, critical, on how we form our political ideologies and identities, Haidt breaks this down: | ||
+ | > Innate does not mean unmalleable; | ||
+ | > 1. Genes Make Brains: sensation-seeking / openness to experience vs threat sensitivity | ||
+ | > 2. Traits Guide Children Along Different Paths: | ||
+ | > (a) Dispositional traits: broad dimensions of personality that show themselves in many different situations and are fairly consistent from childhood through old age | ||
+ | > (b) Characteristic adaptations: | ||
+ | > 3/c. People Construct Life Narrative: The human mind is a story processor, not a logic processor, and among the most important stories we know are stories about ourselves... a bridge between a developing adolescent self and an adult political identity | ||
+ | |||
+ | e.g. grand unified narratives of liberalism or conservativism from the book FIXME maybe skip | ||
+ | Liberal: | ||
+ | > Once upon a time, the vast majority of human persons suffered in societies and social institutions that were unjust, unhealthy, repressive, and oppressive. These traditional societies were repehensible because of their deep-rooted inequality, exploitation, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Conservative: | ||
+ | > Once upon a time, America was a shining beacon. Then liberals came along and erected ane enormous federal bureaucracy that handcuffed the invisible hand of the free market. They subverted our traditional American values and opposed God and faith at every step of the way... Instead of requiring that people work for a living, they siphoned money from hardwokring Americans and gave it to Cadillac-driving drug addicts and welfare queens. Instead of punishing criminals, they tried to " | ||
+ | |||
+ | FIXME idea bundling... binds and blinds is idea bundling... right? | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Blinding ==== | ||
+ | FIXME :!: BLINDING to the other side, e.g. | ||
+ | |||
+ | p. 334 A study to try to saw ahot a " | ||
+ | > Moderates and conservatives were most accurate in their predictions, | ||
+ | > If you don't see that Reagan is pursuing positive values of Loyalty, Authority, and Sancity, you almost have to conclude that Republicans see no positive value in Care and Fairness. | ||
+ | |||
+ | e.g. Michael Feingold, a threater critic for a liberal newspaper the *Village Voice:* | ||
+ | > Republicans don't believe in the imagination, | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Lessons ==== | ||
+ | So, we can learn how teams form, and how people gravitate to the left or right. And we can learn wisdom for building strong communities. | ||
+ | |||
+ | But for being effective communicators to the broader culture, to people currently outside the pro-life community... | ||
+ | * We need to understand how abortion advocates may be thinking, working off different moral foundations, | ||
+ | * (ie. people don't hold different beliefs and worldviews because they' | ||
+ | * We also need to understand how abortion advocates may see //us// if they misunderstand our moral foundations, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Dale Carnegie uses a quotation from Henry Ford: | ||
+ | >> If there is one secret of success it lies in the ability to get the other person' | ||
+ | > | ||
+ | > It's such an obvious point, yet few of us apply it in moral and political arguments because our righteous minds so readily shift into combat mode. The rider and elephant work together smoothly to fend off attacks and lob rhetorical grenades of our own. The performance may impress our friends and show our allies that we are committed members of the team, but no matter how good our logic, it's not going to change the minds of our opponents if they are in combat mode too. If you really want to change someone' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Conclusion ===== | ||
- | FIXME the social intuitionist model (image/ | + | The three principles of moral psychology: |
+ | - Intuitions come first, strategic reasoning second - the elephant and the rider | ||
+ | - There' | ||
+ | - Morality binds and blinds - the Hive Switch | ||
- | ===== The Six Taste Receptors ===== | + | These are the foundations of heart apologetics. In being effective communicators |
- | ===== 90 Percent Chimp and 10 Percent Bee ===== | + |