Taking moral action
by
 
Huff, Chuck, author.

Title
Taking moral action

Author
Huff, Chuck, author.

ISBN
9781118817995
 
9781118818060
 
9781118818077

Physical Description
1 online resource (li, 316 pages) : illustrations (some color)

Series
Contemporary social issues
 
Contemporary social issues (Chichester, England)

Abstract
"The human brain is among the largest relative to body size in mammals (Herculano-Houzel, 2009), but more surprising is that in the evolutionary time scale, the brain has recently (in the last million years or so) shown rapid increases in size (Adolphs, 2009). This poses a puzzle: why such a massive increase in such a relatively short time? One widely accepted answer to this puzzle is the social brain hypothesis (Adolphs, 2009; Byrne & Whiten, 1988; Whiten & van Schaik, 2007). This is the idea that the rapid development of the brain was in response to increases in the complexity of the social problems that were necessary for early hominids to solve. These problems include many of those we will review in this chapter: various forms of cooperation, deception, status hierarchy negotiation, altruistic punishment, and anticipatory fear of punishment. It is during this rapid spate of development that humans became a species able to enact a complex (im)morality"-- Provided by publisher.

Local Note
John Wiley and Sons

Subject Term
Evolutionary psychology.
 
Brain.
 
Social problems -- Psychological aspects.
 
Immorality.
 
Psychologie évolutionniste.
 
Cerveau.
 
Problèmes sociaux -- Aspect psychologique.
 
brains.
 
Brain
 
Evolutionary psychology
 
Immorality
 
Social problems -- Psychological aspects

Added Author
Furchert, Almut,

Electronic Access
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781118817995


LibraryMaterial TypeItem BarcodeShelf Number[[missing key: search.ChildField.HOLDING]]Status
Online LibraryE-Book598280-1001BF698.95 .H84 2024Wiley E-Kitap Koleksiyonu