Episode 36: An Irresponsible Meta-Book Review of Joshua Greene's "Moral Tribes" - a podcast by Tamler Sommers & David Pizarro
from 2013-11-25T18:00
Our most irresponsible episode ever! Dave and Tamler talk about two reviews of a book they haven't read--Joshua Greene'sMoral Tribes: Emotion, Reason, and the Gap Between Us and Them--and feel only a little shame. (Since the recording, at least one of us has finished the book). Can Greene successfully debunk all non-utilitarian intuitions? Does Greene have a dark enough view of human nature? What would an ideal moral world look like? Will Dave ever stop making fun of Tamler's haunted boy haircut? We answer all of these questions and more. Plus we respond to a listener's email and read a couple of our favorite iTunes reviews.
Links
- Moral tribes: Emotion, reason, and the gap between us and them by Joshua Greene [amazon.com]
- Joshua Greene's website [harvard.edu]
- Why can't we all just get along? The uncertain biological basis of morality. Robert Wright reviews "Moral Tribes" forThe Atlantic.
- You Can't Learn About Morality from Brain Scans: The problem with moral psychology. Thomas Nagel Reviews "Moral Tribes" for theNew Republic
- If you don't already have it, Tamler's interview with Joshua Greene and Liane Young in his bookA Very Bad Wizard is worth the read [amazon.com]
- On Debunking(Tamler's five part series of posts at Eric Schwitzgebel's blog The Splintered Mind)
*book links are amazon affiliate links. They are the same price for you but sends a few pennies our way.
Further episodes of Very Bad Wizards
Further podcasts by Tamler Sommers & David Pizarro
Website of Tamler Sommers & David Pizarro