Difference between revisions of "The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion"
From Critiques Of Libertarianism
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[[Category:Book|Haidt, Jonathan]] | [[Category:Book|Haidt, Jonathan]] | ||
[[Category:Jonathan Haidt]] | [[Category:Jonathan Haidt]] | ||
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Moral Foundations]] |
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{{Availability | isbn = 0307455777 | https://b-ok.lat/book/3650643/6aea33 | | }} <!-- can place links to online versions between the bars --> | {{Availability | isbn = 0307455777 | https://b-ok.lat/book/3650643/6aea33 | | }} <!-- can place links to online versions between the bars --> | ||
{{DES | des = While the idea that we make moral decisions intuitively first and then rationalize them later is good, the axes Haidt suggests for morality cannot be scientifically demonstrated to exist. This is pseudoscience comparable to "multiple intelligences". | show=}} | {{DES | des = While the idea that we make moral decisions intuitively first and then rationalize them later is good, the axes Haidt suggests for morality cannot be scientifically demonstrated to exist. This is pseudoscience comparable to "multiple intelligences". | show=}} |