Would you take one human life to save many? The obvious answer might
seem to be "yes"-but what if your choice also meant you would be
sacrificing your own child? Such dilemmas suggest that moral
decision-making has an emotional component, and now scientists have
found the brain region responsible for generating these feelings.



Researchers studied patients with damage to their ventromedial
prefrontal cortex
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ventromedial_prefrontal_cortex>  , an area
in the forebrain where social emotions such as compassion, guilt and
shame arise. They asked the patient to respond to a variety of
hypothetical moral dilemmas evoking emotional reactions of different
strengths, then compared their responses with those of people whose
forebrains were intact.

The subjects with damage showed a utilitarian approach in their answers,
favoring the greater good regardless of the means required to achieve
such ends. For example, many of them said they would smother their own
baby to save a group of other people, whereas those with intact
forebrains more often said they would not do so. In less emotionally
fraught scenarios, all the study participants responded similarly. For
instance, nearly everyone would choose to redirect deadly fumes from a
room with three strangers to a room with one.

The findings show that our natural aversion to harming others emerges
from two previously documented systems in the brain-one emotional and
one rational. The emotional system pinpointed in this study triggers a
fast, reflexive response; it provides a shortcut to what it right in
situations requiring immediate action. The rational side aids us when
deliberation and calculation are advantageous. Scientists do not yet
understand how the two systems interact or how one supersedes the other
when they dictate contradictory courses of action.

Moreover, people with damaged forebrains can still rely on their
rational side to respond to moral dilemmas. "This study doesn't
mean that people who lack social emotions are dangerous," say
neuroscientists Michael Koenigs
<http://neuroscience.grad.uiowa.edu/students/pages/michael-koenigs.html>
, then at the University of Iowa <http://www.uiowa.edu>  , a member of
the research team. "They tend to show empathy and guilt, but they
are not killers."

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>



Reply via email to