4.4 Article

Me, My Self and You: Neuropsychological Relations between Social Emotion, Self-Awareness, and Morality

Journal

EMOTION REVIEW
Volume 3, Issue 3, Pages 313-315

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1754073911402391

Keywords

affect; brain; posteromedial cortex; precuneus; social processing

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Social emotions about others' mind states, for example, compassion for psychological pain or admiration for virtue, are an important foundation for morality because they help us decide how to treat other people. Although these emotions are ostensibly concerned with the mental qualities and situations of others, they can precipitate intimately subjective reflections on the quality of one's own social life and mind, and via these reflections incite a desire to engage in meaningful moral actions. Our interview and neural data suggest that the shift from social emotion to introspection may be facilitated by conscious mental evaluation of emotion-related visceral sensations.

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