*Moral virtue and self-control*

Prof. Roy Baumeister (Psychology, Florida State)
Prof. Richard Holton (Philosophy, Cambridge)
Chaired by Dr. Eric Levy (Judge Business School, Cambridge)

Monday, May 16, 2016
4.30-6pm
Sidgwick Lecture Block Room 3, Sidgwick Site
http://talks.cam.ac.uk/talk/index/66091

Prof. Baumeister and Prof. Holton have been awarded a grant from the
Templeton Foundation for an interdisciplinary project on moral virtue and
self-control. They have joined forces to empirically investigate the
Aristotelian distinction between a self-controlled person who faces but
overcomes temptation and a virtuous agent who is not tempted in the first
place. Their research might shed new light on the familiar problem of how
to best deal with challenges to our resolutions.


*Professor Roy Baumeister *is one of the world's most influential
psychologists. A prolific writer, he has published over 500 scientific
papers over his academic career and more than 30 books, including the New
York Times bestseller Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength.
His work covers a variety of topics including self-regulation, people's
'need to belong', human sexuality, self-esteem and meaning. He received his
Ph.D. in social psychology from Princeton University, and is currently a
Francis Eppes Professor of Psychology at Florida State. He has received
lifetime career awards from the Society for Personality and Social
Psychology, the International Society for Self and Identity Association of
Psychological Science.

*Professor Richard Holton* is one of the most prominent moral philosophers
today. He completed his PhD in philosophy at Princeton University, and has
since taught at several universities including MIT, Monash, and Edinburgh.
He is currently a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge,
and a fellow of Peterhouse College. He is known for his seminal
contributions to moral psychology, ethics, philosophy of law, and
philosophy of language and action, most notably addiction and weakness of
will. He has published numerous academic articles as well as the book
Willing, Wanting, Waiting, where he presents a unique account of the will
and related phenomena.

This event is organised by the Cambridge Moral Psychology Research Group,
an interdisciplinary platform to advance research in moral psychology. The
group brings together researchers from neuroscience, psychology,
philosophy, law, and others who have a common interest in understanding
moral cognition and behaviour. (More at
http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/programmes/moral-psychology).
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