Teaching moral values: Interesting subject!Human Morals need to be taught and it is not inherent to us. — javi2541997
(BTW, why do you say "human" ... Are there morals other than human?) — Alkis Piskas
:grin:The title of the OP says "human morals" so I didn't want get off from the topic — javi2541997
inbuilt moral code or does this need to be learned — David S
Maybe because you have read it too many times that it became indelible in your mind! :grin:I don't even know why I wrote "human morals — javi2541997
Are we born with a certain set of morals or an inbuilt moral code or does this need to be learned, taught by experience? — David S
Are we born with a certain set of morals or an inbuilt moral code or does this need to be learned, taught by experience? — David S
It is not really a moral code but an inborn instinct. — David S
When this subject comes up, I often discuss the work of Karan Wynn on the cognitive abilities of very young children. Here's a link to Wynn's publications page: — T Clark
I think she begins with unexamined assumptions concerning concepts such as compassion , altruism and empathy. The question is , what is it about the way we think about certain aspects of human behavior that lead us to conclude from the fact that they are displayed in very young infants that they are ‘innate’? — Joshs
Do we leap to such conclusions concerning perceptual achievements of infants, or do we first look to see in what ways exposure to environmental stimulation in the womb and out of it may lead to the infant’s construction of perceptual skills? I dont think so, and I think the reason has to do with our woefully poor understanding of the relation between affective phenomena and perceptual-cognitive skills. — Joshs
the only aspect of morality humans inherit is the capacity , and need, to construe meaningful pattens in events. — Joshs
This is learned, not innate. — Joshs
I checked the transcript. Altruism and empathy were not mentioned. Compassion was mentioned twice by an outside commentator, not Wynn. The video focused on children's behavior, not concepts. True, Wynn and others did indicate they thought the behaviors were innate. That doesn't seem like such a jump to me. — T Clark
Why would you jump to the conclusion that the behavior we see is related to events in the womb? These are very young children. They don't have language yet. Do you really think they were taught the behaviors they act out? — T Clark
The early emergence of the evaluation of social actions—present already by 3 months of age—suggests that this capacity cannot result entirely from experience in particular cultural environments or exposure to specific linguistic practices, and it suggests that there are innate bases that ground some components of our moral cognition. — Karen Wynn
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