The aim of this paper is to rebuild the main hypothesis of Churchland’s "Braintrust" (2011) postulating that the origins of sociability and morality lie in the neuro-biology of attachment and bonding. The author sides with Hume’s conception of morality as grounded in sentiments but Churchland conceives them principally in biological terms by tracing them back to the neurocircuitry of the brain and hormones. Particularly, she puts forward the hypothesis that oxytocin (OXT) is the responsible for the social and moral behavior of mammals, including humans. By the end of this paper, we will address Churchland’s criticism of the moral innateness thesis and we will briefly discuss the strong and weak points of her proposal.
Content
1. Contextualizing Churchland’s Braintrust
2. Neurophilosophy and the Challenge of the “World of Values”
3. The “Biological Moral Sentiments”
4. Concluding Remarks
5. Bibliography
- Citation du texte
- Jonathan Arriola (Auteur), 2014, Sociability and Morality in Patricia Churchland’s "Braintrust". An Introduction to Neurophilosophy, Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/347019
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