Moll Jorge, de Oliveira-Souza Ricardo, Eslinger Paul J
Neuroimaging and Behavioral Neurology Group (GNNC), LABS-Hospitais D'Or, Rua Pinheiro Guimarães, 22/4 degrees andar, Botafogo, Rio de Janeiro, RJ 22281-080, Brazil.
Neuroreport. 2003 Mar 3;14(3):299-305. doi: 10.1097/00001756-200303030-00001.
Morality has been at the center of informal talks and metaphysical discussions since the beginning of history. Recently, converging lines of evidence from evolutionary biology, neuroscience and experimental psychology have shown that morality is grounded in the brain. This article reviews the main lines of investigation indicating that moral behavior is a product of evolutionary pressures that shaped the neurobehavioral processes related to the selective perception of social cues, the experience of moral emotions and the adaptation of behavioral responses to the social milieu. These processes draw upon specific cortical-subcortical loops that organize social cognition, emotion and motivation into uniquely human forms of experience and behavior. We put forth a model of brain-behavior relationships underlying moral reasoning and emotion that accommodates the impairments of moral behavior observed in neuropsychiatric disorders. This model provides a framework for empirical testing with current methods of neurobehavioral analysis.
自历史伊始,道德便一直处于非正式谈话和形而上学讨论的核心位置。近来,来自进化生物学、神经科学和实验心理学的一系列相互印证的证据表明,道德扎根于大脑。本文回顾了主要的研究方向,这些研究表明道德行为是进化压力的产物,进化压力塑造了与社会线索的选择性感知、道德情感体验以及行为反应对社会环境的适应性相关的神经行为过程。这些过程利用特定的皮质 - 皮质下环路,将社会认知、情感和动机组织成独特的人类经验和行为形式。我们提出了一个道德推理和情感背后的脑 - 行为关系模型,该模型能够解释在神经精神疾病中观察到的道德行为损伤。这个模型为使用当前神经行为分析方法进行实证检验提供了一个框架。