ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Moral Epistemology brings together philosophers, cognitive scientists, developmental and evolutionary psychologists, animal ethologists, intellectual historians, and educators to provide the most comprehensive analysis of the prospects for moral knowledge ever assembled in print. The book’s thirty chapters feature leading experts describing the nature of moral thought, its evolution, childhood development, and neurological realization. Various forms of moral skepticism are addressed along with the historical development of ideals of moral knowledge and their role in law, education, legal policy, and other areas of social life.

Highlights include:

• Analyses of moral cognition and moral learning by leading cognitive scientists

• Accounts of the normative practices of animals by expert animal ethologists

• An overview of the evolution of cooperation by preeminent evolutionary psychologists

• Sophisticated treatments of moral skepticism, relativism, moral uncertainty, and know-how by renowned philosophers

• Scholarly accounts of the development of Western moral thinking by eminent intellectual historians

• Careful analyses of the role played by conceptions of moral knowledge in political liberation movements, religious institutions, criminal law, secondary education, and professional codes of ethics articulated by cutting-edge social and moral philosophers.

section Section I|228 pages

Science

chapter 2|19 pages

The Normative Sense

What is Universal? What Varies?

chapter 6|15 pages

Moral Learning

chapter 7|18 pages

Moral Reasoning and Emotion

chapter 8|17 pages

Moral Intuitions and Heuristics

section Section II|172 pages

Normative Theory

chapter 11|20 pages

Modern Moral Epistemology

chapter 12|15 pages

Contemporary Moral Epistemology

chapter 13|15 pages

The Denial of Moral Knowledge

chapter 17|13 pages

Moral Perception

chapter 18|15 pages

Moral Intuition

section Section III|151 pages

Applications