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Evolutionary neurology,responsive equilibrium,and the moral brain
Institution:1. School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University College of Engineering, University of Tehran, P. O. Box 14395-515, Tehran, Iran;2. School of Cognitive Sciences, Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences (IPM), P. O. Box 19395-5746, Tehran, Iran
Abstract:The relation between morality and the brain is a topic usefully examined through the evolutionary neurology of John Hughlings-Jackson, who considered higher mental function to be progressively inclusive integration of sensori-motor processes. His view, based on careful observations of patients with neurological disorders, implies that moral reasoning involves integration and coordination of behaviour through a process of representation and re-representation encompassing broader and broader types of information sensitive to environmental contingencies. The relevant information is processed in diverse brain areas: superior temporal sulcus (STS), inferior parietal lobule (IPL), inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), dorsolateral prefrontal (DLPF) areas, as well as anterior temporal (AT) structures. Moral function can be regarded as maximally integrating emotion, social cognition, and other-regarding sensibilities using propositionally organised cognitive structures that map a shared world of human activity and relationships so that they take account of what in social and personal life counts as something.
Keywords:Moral judgment  Frontal lobe function  Social cognition  Hughlings-Jackson  The moral brain
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