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Neurologists have identified part of the brain that defines us as human and allows emotion and intuition to work in tandem with logic to solve moral dilemmas.
The brain section is crucial to solving extreme moral conundrums but rather than applying rational thinking alone, decisions are coloured by emotion, a study shows.
It is the first time that emotion has been demonstrated to play a part in making judgments between right and wrong and helps to explain why people are humane rather than wholly rational.
The study suggests that people’s brains have evolved biologically and culturally to require an element of compassion and to reject utilitarian, robotic decision-making and philosophy.
Researchers in the US showed that a frontal lobe in the brain, the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, (VMPC) plays a crucial role in decision-making.
Antonia Damasio, of the University of Southern California, said: “This component of the system is one among several that contribute to our wisdom and humanity.
“The findings indicate that purely rational accounts of moral judgments do not describe all the possible conditions humans face. Emotions appear to contribute to some of those judgments.
“It does appear from our study that humans reject extreme forms of utilitarian calculation. That rejection is tied to the deployment of social emotions.
“I think this mixed form of moral judgment, combining reason and emotion, manifests wisdom slowly accumulated over evolutionary time.”
The classic extreme moral dilemma is when people have to decide whether to kill one innocent person to save others. Rationally there is only the simple choice between the good of the one and the good of the many but most people waver or refuse to act for the apparent greater good.
The US study showed that rather than emotion entering the equation after choice has been made, it is an integral part of the decision-making process.
A group of 30 volunteers were asked to reach decisions on a range of moral dilemmas.
Six of the group had brain damage to the prefrontal cortex, leading them to lack empathy and compassion.
The results, published in the journal Nature, showed that they found it far easier to make an emotionless decision than any of the other volunteers. Those with damage stood out in their stated willingness to harm an individual, a prospect that usually generates “strong aversion”.
Scientists were, however, surprised to find that there was no difference in decisions on lower-grade moral judgments, such as whether to destroy a valuable statue to save someone’s life. Then, there was no difference between them and the other people in the study.
Professor Marc Hauser, of Harvard University, said: “Our work provides the first causal account of the role of emotions in moral judgments. What is absolutely astonishing about our results is how selective the deficit is.”
The researchers concluded: “These findings indicate that, for a selective set of moral dilemmas, the VMPC is critical for normal judgments of right and wrong. The findings support a necessary role for emotion in the generation of those judgments.”
Hard choices
Moral dilemmas that the volunteers had to consider:
— You, a man and a boy are the only survivors of a plane crash in the Himalayas. Your only chance of surviving is to walk for several days to find a village. The boy has a broken leg and virtually no chance of living. You have no food. The man suggests that you sacrifice the boy and eat his remains. Would you kill this boy so that you and the man may survive your journey to safety?
— Your ship sinks and you take to a lifeboat that is overcrowded and dangerously low in the water. Among your companions is an injured person who will not survive. The seas get rough and the boat will sink, drowning everyone, unless you throw the injured person overboard. Would you throw him out to save yourself and the others?
— You are among a group, including eight children, taken hostage in the jungle. The leaders of the terrorists offers to free you and the children if you kill a hostage to whom he has taken a dislike. Otherwise he says that he will kill all the hostages in the morning. Would you kill one of your fellow hostages in order to escape from the terrorists and save the lives of the eight children?
— It is wartime and an enemy doctor intends to perform fatal experiments on one of your children, but he will allow you to choose which it is. If you refuse he will experiment on both. Would you take one child to the lab to avoid having them both die?
— You set up camp on a sacred burial ground and your family must be put to death. The clan leader will let you go provided you kill your oldest son
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Well these are quite a heavy choices to make, but to make some conclusion about cortex because of these would be even harder choice!!!! But these choices indeed would be very good ice breakers in my Sunday school class.Thank you :D
John, Makati , Philippines
Science is the new religion.
Leticia Mercado, Cambridge, Massachusetts
A while back, I told someone I was an atheist. He knew me to have empathy and a strong moral compass. He asked how someone could care about virtues without a belief in eternal souls and divine consequences.
I guess I should tell him that I use my ventromedial prefrontal cortex as a guide.
Tom, Atherton, CA
This study is simplistic in the extreme, where it is not wrong. Questioning people on how they would act in a certain situation is not exactly the most scientific of experiments. For example, how many people would say 'no' if asked if they would sleep with someone after a first date. However, I guarantee you the number that would actually sleep with someone would be far greater.
John, London,
Dear Sirs,
The cientist's name is António Damásio, not Antonia.
Yours sincerely,
Carla Correia, Porto, Portugal
I'm very proud because António Damásio is portuguese like me. But ,please, his name is AntóniO, not AntóniA.
Maria da Graça, Lisbon, Portugal
1). No.
2). No.
3). No.
4). No.
5). No.
easy really, what's the fuss?
neil Murphy, cromer,
More and less does not exist in the human equation
The theory that the good of the many is to be placed above the good of the one does not exist in the human equation if it is considered through the provided examples. The sole of a person means the sole of the many. The question of more and less, or the lesser of two evils, cannot be applied in regard with the human lives, because souls are not materials that can be measured or compensated by monetary or tangible standards. There is a saying in Islam that he who saves a life of an individual is considered as if he saved the lives of the mankind.
ismail Rabah, Gaza, Palestine
I agree with the report. This is exactly what Prophet Mohammad taught. He said that if you listen to your heart - meaning your conscience - then you will know what is right and what is wrong. However, it is all the other noise in the outside world, distracting factors that drown this call of conscience. We often fail to listen to our own heart which is the best of all guides. You dont have to be a religous person to be moral. Anyone can be good if he or she learns to give heed to what their heart if saying.
Z Hussain, Rochdale, UK
It all depends on what is your moral compass. Either one of your roles in life is to protrect children and those weaker or it is not.
Carry the boy out until he dies if you are strong enough and try to bury him as best you can If and when he dies or leave him as comfortable as you can make him.
Losing one person from a lifeboat wll not make a difference; keep him aboard until he dies.
Going into a hostile jungle with children is not a decision a rational parent would make. Reject the premise of the question.
Enemy doctor will kill all of you anyway. Why would you trust him?Try to get the jump on him if you can. Don't give him the satisfaction of knowing he made you kill one of your children. Don't betray the trust your child has in you.
Same answer as going into the hostile jungle. No rational person or parent would do that? I have to assume that the adults in both instances are not mentally impaired .
Answers are not black and white as the study attempts to imply.
Jim, Roscoe, USA
"Moral" judgments derive from cultural permissions. Our brains seem able to accmmodate almost any such permissions, damage unnecessary..
It is entertaining to address "hypotheticals," less so to address present permissions: Whom is it safe to harm today? How does it vary by culture? Sub-culture?
Harold A. Maio, Ft Myers , USA
Great article. As a scientist, I hope we will be able to understand neuroscience enough to model brain functions [and, therefore, human behaviour] mathematically. Though, I do not think that such modelling can be deterministic, but probabilistic, and would quantify human tendencies (as opposed to actual human choices).
This article, which shows that human behaviour is not completely reducible to rational choices (albeit all humans are equally capable of reasoning), seems to corroborate the above view.
Pankaj Vaishnavi, London,
Under NO circumstances would I choose to allow the killing of one innocent person, so that another could live. Only an extremely selfish person would trade a life for a life.
God designed the human brain to have empathy, If the devil hasn't taken over a person will not be a party to a human sacrifice.
It is not a mystery, and evolution has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with this question. We are designed to be good, but wrong choices will make a person selfish and bad. These self generated bad people don't mind killing another human if it will save themselves.
James Collins, wagener, USA/South Carolina