Provides a systematic framework for understanding and shaping moral action
Taking Moral Action offers a timely and comprehensive overview of the emerging field of moral psychology, introducing readers to one of the most vibrant areas of research in contemporary psychology. With an inclusive and interdisciplinary approach, authors Chuck Huff and Almut Furchert incorporate a wide range of empirical findings, scientific theory, and their interconnections with philosophical and theological approaches. This allows them to systematically explore the complex network of influences, contexts, and processes involved in producing and structuring moral action.
Integrating key empirical and theoretical literature, this unique volume helpsreaders grasp the different aspects of bothhabitual and intentional acts of moral action. Thematically organized chapters examine moral action in contexts such as evolution, moral ecology, personality, moral identity and the self, moral reason, moral emotion, and more. Each chapter features a discussion of how neuroscience underlies or supports the influence and process addressed. Throughout the book, historical stories of moral action and examples of humanistic and experiential traditions of moral formation highlight what is possible, relevant, and appropriate intaking moral action in a variety of settings.
* Offers a framework of the variation in ways that individuals experience and construct moral identity and engage in moral action and formation
* Reviews cultural, organizational, group, and social influences to explore how individuals actively shape their moral environment
* Discusses the integration of reason and emotion in morality and considers how individuals can change or train their moral responses and skills
* Explores the relationships among empirical psychology, philosophy, and theology mapping out the interdisciplinary field of moral psychology
* Emphasizes the practical application of the science of morality in service of moral good
Taking Moral Action is essential reading for those new to the field and experienced practitioners alike. Containing extensive references and links to further readings, Taking Moral Action is also an excellent textbook for college and university courses in areas such as psychology, ethics, theology, philosophy, anthropology, and neuroscience and in applied fields where moral action is important.
Preface ix
Introduction xiii
Part I Contexts 1
1 Evolution 3
2 Neuroscience of Moral Action 29
3 Moral Ecology 57
Part II Influences 87
4 Personality 89
5 Moral Identity and the Self 115
6 Skills and Knowledge 145
Part III Processes 177
7 Moral Reason 179
8 Moral Emotion 215
9 Moral Formation: Shaping Moral Action 246
Coda: Taking Moral Action 291
Index 299
CHUCK HUFF is Professor of Psychology and Computer Science at St. Olaf College, MN, where he teaches courses in social psychology, ethical issues in software design, the psychology of good and evil, and the psychology of religion. He has published quantitative and qualitative research on moral psychology, the ethical design of software, gender and computing, and digital ethics. His articles have appeared in computer science, education, philosophy, psychology, and sociology journals.
ALMUT FURCHERT is a German philosopher and psychologist in independent practice with expertise in existential, phenomenological, and hermeneutic traditions. She has published internationally in the intersection of philosophy, psychology, theology, and the caring professions, and has held academic positions at the Jesuit School of Philosophy in Munich, the Technical University of Munich, and the Hong Kierkegaard Research Library at St Olaf College. She is also a member of the Hildegard of Bingen Academy in Eibingen, Germany.