Conference Program
Morality, Moral Philosophy, and the Humanities in the Age of Neuroscience
November 17-20, 2016
91ֿ Hotel and Conference Center | 215 South Depeyster Street, Kent, Ohio
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2016
4:30-6:00 Registration
5:30-5:45 Welcome and Opening Remarks, Dix Room
Mark Bracher, Professor of English and Director, Neurocognitive Research Program for the Advancement of the Humanities (NRPAH), 91ֿ
James Blank, Professor of Biology and Dean, College of Arts & Sciences, 91ֿ University
5:45-7:00 Keynote Address, Dix Room
“Human Morality: Features and Bugs,” Joshua Greene, Professor of Psychology, Harvard University
Introduction: Deborah Barnbaum, Professor and Chair, Department of Philosophy, 91ֿ
7:00-9:00 Reception with Cash Bar
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2016
8:00-9:00 Continental Breakfast Buffet and Registration, Hotel Cafe
9:00-10:30 Panel, Dix Room
The Moral Self
Panel Chair: Janis Crowther
- "The Moral Self: A Philosophical Perspective,” Joshua August Skorburg
- "The Moral Self: A Social Psychological Perspective," Jim A.C. Everett
- "The Moral Self: A Social Neuroscientific Perspective," Jordan Livingston
- "The Moral Self: A Cognitive Neuroscientific Perspective,” Michael Ferguson
10:30-11:00 Break
11:00-12:00 Plenary Address, Dix Room
“Morality for Actual Lives,” Peggy DesAutels, Professor of Philosophy, University of Dayton
Introduction: Michael Byron, Professor of Philosophy, 91ֿ
12:00-1:00 Lunch, Kent Room
1:00-2:30 Panels
A. Free Will, Cognitive Control, and Dual Processes, Dix Room
Panel Chair: Phillip Hamrick
- “Situating Emotions in a Dual-Process Account of Moral Judgment,” Daniel Shargel
- “The Neuroscience of Moral Responsibility,” Samuel Murray
- “Social Emotion and Moral Grammar: Two Sources of Moral Intuition,” Haoying Liu
B. Literature and Moral Development, McGilvrey Room
Panel Chair: Matthew Coate
- “Tragedy, Moral Responsibility, and the Neuroscience of Decisions,” David Palmer
- “Using Literary Emotion for Ethical Change,” Dana Munteanu
- “Human Bias in Ibsen’s Enemy of the People,” Todd O. Williams
2:30-3:00 Break
3:00-4:00 Plenary Address, Dix Room
“Implicit Moral Attitudes and their Philosophical Implications,” Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Chauncey Stillman Professor of Practical Ethics, Duke University
Introduction: David Pereplyotchik, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, 91ֿ
4:00-4:30 Break
4:30-6:00 Panels
A. Morality, Self, and Society, Dix Room
Panel Chair: Gina Zavota
“Persuading Ourselves We’re Moral,” Ashton T. Sperry
“Using Ricoeur’s Phenomenology of the Capable Human Being as a Complementary Perspective to the Cognitive and Neuroscientific Findings on Morality,” Diane Laflamme
B. Normative Ethics, Metaethics, and Neuroscience, McGilvrey Room
Panel Chair: Michael Byron
- “What Should an Empirical Critique of Kantian Ethics Look Like?” Kevin Mills
- “Ethical Implications of Neuroscience: Realism without Rationalism,” Thomas Kiefer
- “Two Roles for Neurocognitive Science in Constitutivism,” Caleb Dewey
6:00-7:30 Reception with Cash Bar
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2016
8:00-9:00 Continental Breakfast Buffet and Registration, Hotel Cafe
9:00-10:15 Panels
A. Comeuppance: Nineteenth-Century Fiction and Neurocognitive Justice, Panel I, Dix Room
Panel Chair: Françoise Massardier-Kenney
- “Fairy Tales and Morality: Tales of Vulnerability,” Fritz Breithaupt
- “Moral Judgment and the Adultery Novel: How Stories Can Shape Side-Taking Decisions,” Brian Tucker
- “The Unknowable Baron: Alterity and Moral Trust in Social-Critical Realism,” Jenny Strakovsky
B. The Cognitive Bases of Moral Decision-Making, McGilvrey Room
Panel Chair: Murali Shanker
- “Professional Ethical Identity and Decision-Making in Experts Versus Novices,” Morgan Kiper Riechel
- “Can Improving Episodic Cognition Make Us Better Moral Judges?” Nathan Stout
- “Facts as Determinants for Morality: How Human Action, Reason, Cognition, and Social Activity Determine What We Ought to Do,” Michael S. Dauber
10:15-10:30 Break
10:30-11:30 Plenary Address, Dix Room
“Embodied Wisdom: Human Nature and Human Potential,” Darcia Narvaez, Professor of Psychology, University of Notre Dame
Introduction: Jon A. Sefcek, Assistant Professor of Psychology, 91ֿ
11:30-12:00 Break
12:00-1:00 Plenary Address, Dix Room
“The Logic of Communities of Trust,” Mark Alfano, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Delft University of Technology
Introduction: Susan Roxburgh, Professor of Sociology, 91ֿ
1:00-2:00 Lunch, Kent Room
2:00-3:15 Panels
A. Neuroscience or Not? The Psycho-Biological Origins of Morality, Dix Room
Panel Chair: Joshua Pollock
- “Locating the Normative Insignificance of Neuroscience,” Thomas Noah
- “Fetal Origins of the Moral Self: Vestibular Experiences,” Azucena Verdin
B. Moral Education and Ethical Praxis, McGilvrey Room
Panel Chair: Frank Scalambrino
- “Moral Education and Personality: Practicing Virtues in Childhood,” Maria Judith Sucupira de Costa Lins and Carla Christina Silveira Sousa
- “Increases in Empathy and Theory of Mind after a Middle School Reading Unit Vary with Gender, Book and Format,” Louise Freeman
- “The Methodological Pursuit of Lived Experience,” Sara J. Newman, Elizabeth Tomlinson, and Ya’el Courtney
3:15-3:30 Break
3:30-4:30 Plenary Address, Dix Room
“Adventures in Story Science: The Ethical Function of Literature in an Experimental Age,” Angus Fletcher, Associate Professor of English, Ohio State University
Introduction: Tammy Clewell, Professor of English, 91ֿ
4:30-5:00 Break
5:00-6:00 Panels
A. Morality, Sociality, and Evolution, Dix Room
Panel Chair: TBA
- “Is It Good to Cooperate? Testing the Theory of Morality-as-Cooperation in 60 Societies,” Oliver Scott Curry, Daniel Austin Mullins, and Harvey Whitehouse
- “Gossip: Social Intelligence and Evolutionary Origins,” Brian Robinson
B. Comeuppance: Nineteenth-Century Fiction and Neurocognitive Justice, Panel II, McGilvrey Room
Panel Chair: Maryanne DeJulio
- “Transnationalism and Infidelity: Morality and the Nation,” John Lyon
- “How MacGuffins Work: Justice, Truth, and Satisfaction in George Sluizer's The Vanishing,” William Flesch
6:00-7:00 Reception with Cash Bar
7:00-9:00 Banquet, Kent Room
Banquet Address
"On Philosophy and Social Science: Virtue as Social Intelligence and Beyond,"
Nancy E. Snow, Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Institute for the Study of Human Flourishing, University of Oklahoma
Introduction: Mark Bracher, Professor of English and Director, Neurocognitive Research Program for the Advancement of the Humanities (NRPAH), 91ֿ
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2016
8:00-9:00 Continental Breakfast Buffet
9:00-10:00 Panel, Dix Room
Trolley Problems, Moral Judgment, and Moral Experimentation
Panel Chair: David Pereplyotchik
- “Beyond Emotional Deontology—Emotional Focus and Cognitive Orientations Conjointly Shape Moral Judgments,” Johannes T. Doerflinger and Peter M. Gollwitzer
- “Let a Thousand Methods Bloom: On the Neuroscience of Moral Judgment and the Reverse Inference Problem,” Brett Karlan
10:00-10:30 Break
10:30-11:30 Plenary Address, Dix Room
"Gratitude, Giving, and Gray Matter. Altruism in a Changing Brain." Christina Karns, Research Associate, Brain Development Lab, University of Oregon
Introduction: Ernest Freeman, Professor and Director, Biomedical Sciences Program, 91ֿ
11:30-12:30 Round Table Wrap Up, Dix Room
12:30 Box Lunch, Kent Room