Braintrust: What Neuroscience Tells Us about Morality

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"Braintrust: What Neuroscience Tells Us about Morality" is a book by philosopher and neuroscientist Patricia Churchland that explores how brain science and evolution underpin human moral behavior and values.

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Predicate Object
instanceOf book
non-fiction book
author Patricia Churchland NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
genre ethics
neuroscience
philosophy
hasAuthorOccupation neuroscientist
philosopher
hasPerspective naturalistic ethics
scientific approach to morality
language English
mainTopic altruism
attachment and bonding
attachment neurobiology
brain evolution in mammals
brain mechanisms of decision-making
critique of moral rationalism
cultural variation in moral norms
empathy
evolution of morality
evolutionary origins of moral norms
moral psychology
morality
naturalistic approach to ethics
neural basis of norm compliance
neural basis of trust
neural basis of values
neurophilosophy
prosocial behavior
relationship between biology and ethics
relationship between religion and morality
relationship between self-interest and morality
role of learning in moral development
role of oxytocin in social behavior
role of reward systems in moral behavior
social cooperation
social neuroscience
proposesView evolution and neurobiology underpin human moral behavior
moral norms emerge from social needs and attachment systems
moral values are shaped by both biology and culture
morality is grounded in brain processes
religion is not the primary source of morality
targetAudience academic readers
general educated readers interested in science and ethics

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Patricia Churchland notableWork Braintrust: What Neuroscience Tells Us about Morality