Morality as a Scaffold for Social Prediction
Thesis advisor: Liane L. Young === Thesis advisor: Elizabeth A. Kensinger === Theory of mind refers to the process of representing others’ mental states. This process consistently elicits activity in a network of brain regions: the theory of mind network (ToMN). Typically, theory of mind has been un...
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ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1076242019-05-10T07:35:44Z Morality as a Scaffold for Social Prediction Theriault, Jordan Eugene Thesis advisor: Liane L. Young Thesis advisor: Elizabeth A. Kensinger Text thesis 2017 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Theory of mind refers to the process of representing others’ mental states. This process consistently elicits activity in a network of brain regions: the theory of mind network (ToMN). Typically, theory of mind has been understood in terms of content, i.e. representing the semantic content of someone’s beliefs. However, recent work has proposed that ToMN activity could be better understood in the context of social prediction; or, more specifically, prediction error—the difference between observed and predicted information. Social predictions can be represented in multiple forms—e.g. dispositional predictions about who a person is, prescriptive norms about what people should do, and descriptive norms about what people frequently do. Part 1 examined the relationship between social prediction error and ToMN activity, finding that the activity in the ToMN was related to both dispositional, and prescriptive predictions. Part 2 examined the semantic content represented by moral claims. Prior work has suggested that morals are generally represented and understood as objective, i.e. akin to facts. Instead, we found that moral claims are represented as far more social than prior work had anticipated, eliciting a great deal of activity across the ToMN. Part 3 examined the relationship between ToMN activity and metaethical status, i.e. the extent that morals were perceived as objective or subjective. Objective moral claims elicited less ToMN activity, whereas subjective moral claimed elicited more. We argue that this relationship is best understood in the context of prediction, where objective moral claims represent strong social priors about what most people will believe. Finally, I expand on this finding and argue that a theoretical approach incorporating social prediction has serious implications for morality, or more specifically, for the motivations underlying normative compliance. People may be compelled to observe moral rules because doing so maintains a predictable social environment. Metaethics Morality Moral Psychology Predictive Coding Social Neuroscience Theory of Mind Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2017. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: Psychology. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:107624 |
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Metaethics Morality Moral Psychology Predictive Coding Social Neuroscience Theory of Mind |
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Metaethics Morality Moral Psychology Predictive Coding Social Neuroscience Theory of Mind Theriault, Jordan Eugene Morality as a Scaffold for Social Prediction |
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Thesis advisor: Liane L. Young === Thesis advisor: Elizabeth A. Kensinger === Theory of mind refers to the process of representing others’ mental states. This process consistently elicits activity in a network of brain regions: the theory of mind network (ToMN). Typically, theory of mind has been understood in terms of content, i.e. representing the semantic content of someone’s beliefs. However, recent work has proposed that ToMN activity could be better understood in the context of social prediction; or, more specifically, prediction error—the difference between observed and predicted information. Social predictions can be represented in multiple forms—e.g. dispositional predictions about who a person is, prescriptive norms about what people should do, and descriptive norms about what people frequently do. Part 1 examined the relationship between social prediction error and ToMN activity, finding that the activity in the ToMN was related to both dispositional, and prescriptive predictions. Part 2 examined the semantic content represented by moral claims. Prior work has suggested that morals are generally represented and understood as objective, i.e. akin to facts. Instead, we found that moral claims are represented as far more social than prior work had anticipated, eliciting a great deal of activity across the ToMN. Part 3 examined the relationship between ToMN activity and metaethical status, i.e. the extent that morals were perceived as objective or subjective. Objective moral claims elicited less ToMN activity, whereas subjective moral claimed elicited more. We argue that this relationship is best understood in the context of prediction, where objective moral claims represent strong social priors about what most people will believe. Finally, I expand on this finding and argue that a theoretical approach incorporating social prediction has serious implications for morality, or more specifically, for the motivations underlying normative compliance. People may be compelled to observe moral rules because doing so maintains a predictable social environment. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2017. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: Psychology. |
author |
Theriault, Jordan Eugene |
author_facet |
Theriault, Jordan Eugene |
author_sort |
Theriault, Jordan Eugene |
title |
Morality as a Scaffold for Social Prediction |
title_short |
Morality as a Scaffold for Social Prediction |
title_full |
Morality as a Scaffold for Social Prediction |
title_fullStr |
Morality as a Scaffold for Social Prediction |
title_full_unstemmed |
Morality as a Scaffold for Social Prediction |
title_sort |
morality as a scaffold for social prediction |
publisher |
Boston College |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:107624 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT theriaultjordaneugene moralityasascaffoldforsocialprediction |
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1719079270117015552 |