2. Dual-process theories, cognitive decoupling and the outcome-to-intent shift: A developmental perspective on evolutionary ethics
Gordon P. D. Ingram and Camilo Moreno-Romero
3. Not so hypocritical after all: Belief revision is adaptive and often unnoticed
Neil Levy
4. The chimpanzee stone accumulation ritual and the evolution of moral behavior
James B. Harrod
Part II. The evolution of moral cognition
5. Morality as an Evolutionary Exaptation
Marcus Arvan
6. Social animals and the potential for morality: On the cultural exaptation of behavioral capacities required for normativity
Estelle Palao
7. Against the evolutionary debunking of morality: Deconstructing a philosophical myth
Alejandro Rosas
Part III. The cultural evolution of morality
8. The cultural evolution of extended benevolence
Andrés Carlos Luco
9. The contingency of the cultural evolution of morality, debunking, and theism vs. naturalism
Matthew Braddock
10. Morality as cognitive scaffolding in the nucleus of the Mesoamerican cosmovision
Alfredo Robles-Zamora
Johan De Smedt has co-authored A natural history of natural theology. The cognitive science of theology and philosophy of religion (MIT Press, 2015) and The Challenge of Evolution to Religion (Cambridge University Press, 2020), and published empirically-informed philosophy of science, religion, and art.
Helen De Cruz is holder of the Danforth Chair in the Humanities at Saint Louis University, Missouri, US. Her publications are in empirically-informed philosophy of cognitive science, philosophy of religion, social epistemology, and metaphilosophy. She is author of, recently, Religious Disagreement (Cambridge University Press, 2020), and co-editor of Philosophy through Science Fiction Stories. Exploring the Boundaries of the Possible (Bloomsbury, 2021).
A growing body of evidence from the sciences suggests that our moral beliefs have an evolutionary basis. To explain how human morality evolved, some philosophers have called for the study of morality to be naturalized, i.e., to explain it in terms of natural causes by looking at its historical and biological origins. The present literature has focused on the link between evolution and moral realism: if our moral beliefs enhance fitness, does this mean they track moral truths? In spite of the growing empirical evidence, these discussions tend to remain high-level: the mere fact that morality has evolved is often deemed enough to decide questions in normative and meta-ethics. This volume starts from the assumption that the details about the evolution of morality do make a difference, and asks how. It presents original essays by authors from various disciplines, including philosophy, anthropology, developmental psychology, and primatology, who write in conversation with neuroscience, sociology, and cognitive psychology.