Ernie :
You are on the money about that. This hearkens  back to Jonathan Haight,
and his research on values systems of Liberals. Conservatives, and  
Libertarians.
Both kinds of "Libs" are essentially one factor types, everything moral  
reduces
to compassion ( for the Left ) or freedom ( for Libertarians ).  
Conservatives
seek a balance among a half dozen factors.
 
My guess is that we should be able to find a counterpart weakness in
conservatism in some other area, maybe economics and reduction
of the whole shootin' match to free trade, with Liberals taking a
more holistic view. 
 
Yet I was fascinated with the fact that one major factor in morality has  
been
located in a specific chemical substance and that, knowing this,  something
like "moral effects" can be stimulated  --not so much with drugs, or  not 
at all,
but as the article says, by encouraging activities that produce  oxytocin.
 
I will also guess  --it seems really clear--  that some  religions or 
ethical philosophies
generate a lot of oxytocin and others very little except in a few  
particulars.
Knowing this puts us in a position to empirically evaluate religions,  etc,
in terms of their effects. This is already well along in study of  religions
and economic achievement. Want to see someone bootstrap himself /  herself
to do better economically in life and be less interested in "vices" ?
Convert the person to Pentecostalism / Charismatic Christianity, or
Baptist faith, or Mormonism.  Works like a charm.
 
Also very good for most Jews and Confucians.
 
There aren't enough Zoroastrians to be really sure, but they also seem to  
belong.
 
So, yeah, it is smart to be wary of the kinds of generalizations that the  
article
seems to imply. But there is some substance here that seems to be quite  
valid.
 
Billy
 
==================================
 
4/29/2012 3:40:59 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Bizarre how liberals equate empathy ( trust) with morality, just as they  
demonize vengeance ( testosterone ). 


The Biblical formula "Love mercy, do justly, walk humbly before God" is a  
much better (if uncomfortable) balance. 


E

Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 29, 2012, at 10:33, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:




 



WSJ
 
 April 27, 2012, 7:48 p.m. ET  
The Trust Molecule 
Why are some of us caring and some of us  cruel, some generous and some 
greedy? Paul J. Zakon the new  science of morality— and how it could be used to 
create a more virtuous  society.

 
Could a single molecule—one chemical substance—lie at the very center of  
our moral lives? 
Research that I have done over the past decade suggests that a chemical  
messenger called oxytocin accounts for why some people give freely of  
themselves and others are coldhearted louts, why some people cheat and steal  
and 
others you can trust with your life, why some husbands are more faithful  
than others, and why women tend to be nicer and more generous than men. In  our 
blood and in the brain, oxytocin appears to be the chemical elixir that  
creates bonds of trust not just in our intimate relationships but also in  our 
business dealings, in politics and in society at large.  
Known primarily as a female reproductive hormone, oxytocin controls  
contractions during labor, which is where many women encounter it as  Pitocin, 
the 
synthetic version that doctors inject in expectant mothers to  induce 
delivery. Oxytocin is also responsible for the calm, focused  attention that 
mothers lavish on their babies while breast-feeding. And it  is abundant, too, 
on wedding nights (we hope) because it helps to create the  warm glow that 
both women and men feel during sex, a massage or even a hug.  
 
Since 2001, my colleagues and I have conducted a number of experiments  
showing that when someone's level of oxytocin goes up, he or she responds  more 
generously and caringly, even with complete strangers. As a benchmark  for 
measuring behavior, we relied on the willingness of our subjects to  share 
real money with others in real time. To measure the increase in  oxytocin, we 
took their blood and analyzed it. Money comes in conveniently  measurable 
units, which meant that we were able to quantify the increase in  generosity 
by the amount someone was willing to share. We were then able to  correlate 
these numbers with the increase in oxytocin found in the blood.   
Later, to be certain that what we were seeing was true cause and effect,  
we sprayed synthetic oxytocin into our subjects' nasal passages—a way to get  
it directly into their brains. Our conclusion: We could turn the behavioral 
 response on and off like a garden hose. (Don't try this at home: Oxytocin  
inhalers aren't available to consumers in the U.S.)
 
More strikingly, we found that you don't need to shoot a chemical up  
someone's nose, or have sex with them, or even give them a hug in order to  
create the surge in oxytocin that leads to more generous behavior. To  trigger 
this "moral molecule," all you have to do is give someone a sign of  trust. 
When one person extends himself to another in a trusting way—by, say,  giving 
money—the person being trusted experiences a surge in oxytocin that  makes 
her less likely to hold back and less likely to cheat. Which is  another way 
of saying that the feeling of being trusted makes a person  more…
trustworthy. Which, over time, makes other people more inclined to  trust, 
which in turn
… 
If you detect the makings of an endless loop that can feed back onto  
itself, creating what might be called a virtuous circle—and ultimately a  more 
virtuous society—you are getting the idea. 
Obviously, there is more to it, because no one chemical in the body  
functions in isolation, and other factors from a person's life experience  play 
a 
role as well. Things can go awry. In our studies, we found that a  small 
percentage of subjects never shared any money; analysis of their blood  
indicated that their oxytocin receptors were malfunctioning. But for  everyone 
else, oxytocin orchestrates the kind of generous and caring  behavior that [ 
not 
every ] every culture endorses as the right way to  live—the cooperative, 
benign, pro-social way of living that every culture on  the planet describes 
as "moral." The Golden Rule is a lesson that the body  already knows, and 
when we get it right, we feel the rewards  immediately. 
This isn't to say that oxytocin always makes us good or generous or  
trusting. In our rough-and-tumble world, an unwavering response of openness  
and 
loving kindness would be like going around with a "kick me" sign on your  
back. Instead, the moral molecule works like a gyroscope, helping us to  
maintain our balance between behavior based on trust and behavior based on  
wariness and distrust. In this way oxytocin helps us to navigate between the  
social benefits of openness—which are considerable—and the reasonable  caution 
that we need to avoid being taken for a ride. 
Consider a real-life experiment that I conducted with a bride named Linda  
Geddes. A writer for the British magazine New Scientist, Linda had been  
following my research and thought it would be fun to see if the emotional  
uplift of her wedding would alter the guests' levels of oxytocin.  
I arrived at the venue, a Victorian manor house in the English  
countryside, with a 150-pound centrifuge and 70 pounds of dry ice. I  unpacked 
my 
equipment—syringes, 156 prelabeled test tubes, tourniquets,  alcohol preps, 
Band-Aids—and got to work. The plan that I'd worked out with  Linda was to take 
two samples from a cross section of the friends and family  in attendance—one 
draw of blood immediately before the vows and one  immediately after.  
After all the blood had been drawn, I slipped out with my test tubes  
nestled in their cushion of dry ice. It took two weeks for the samples to  
arrive 
at my California lab via FedEx, but the results showed just what we  were 
hoping for: a simple snapshot of oxytocin's ability to read and reflect  the 
nuances of a social situation. 
The changes in individual oxytocin levels at Linda's ceremony could be  
mapped out like the solar system, with the bride as the sun. Between the  first 
and second draws of blood, which were only an hour apart, Linda's own  
level shot up by 28%. For the other people tested, the increase in oxytocin  
was 
in direct proportion to the likely intensity of their emotional  engagement 
in the event. The mother of the bride? Up 24%. The father of the  groom? Up 
19%. The groom himself? Up 13%…and on down the line. 
But why, you may ask, would the groom's increase be less than his  
father's? Testosterone is one of several other hormones that can interfere  
with the 
release of oxytocin, and the groom's testosterone level, according  to our 
blood test, had surged 100%! As the guests admired Linda in her  strapless 
bridal gown, he was the alpha male. 
 
Our study at the wedding had demonstrated just the kind of graded and  
contingent sensitivity that allows oxytocin to guide us between trust and  
wariness, generosity and self-protection. Should I feel safe and warm and  
cuddly 
in this crowd, or do I have to be on guard? Or maybe it is a  situation in 
which the best outcome results from oxytocin dominating in one  person and 
testosterone driving the other. 
It is the sensitivity of oxytocin in its interaction with a range of  other 
chemical messengers that helps to account for why human behavior is so  
infinitely complex—and why the bliss of the wedding day (and night) is often  
hard to maintain. (Consider the old joke about the guy who couldn't  
understand why his wife was unhappy. "I told you that I loved you when I  asked 
you 
to marry me," he said. "I don't see why I need to tell you  again.") 
But there is a larger payoff from this research: After centuries of  
speculation about human nature and how we decide what is the right thing to  
do, 
we at last have some news we can use—empirical evidence that illuminates  the 
mechanism at the heart of our moral guidance system. So what can we do  to 
shift behavior a bit more toward the expression of oxytocin and thus  
improve the workings of our entire society? 
The experiments I have conducted show that many group activities—singing,  
dancing, praying—cause the release of oxytocin and promote connection and  
caring. As social creatures, we have created activities that prompt the  
expression of oxytocin in order to foster connection to others. In fact,  those 
who release the most oxytocin when they are trusted are happier and  
healthier because they have richer social lives. 
Even the sort of "social snacking" that happens through Twitter or  
checking out a friend's Facebook page can prompt an oxytocin surge. But the  
real 
criterion for success is whether these online activities complement  more 
substantial personal connections. Does this form of communication  foster human 
bonds or does it foster anonymity and abstraction to the point  of cutting 
off empathy?  
Another approach to tune oxytocin release is to seek exposure to people  
outside our own families or cultural and geographic "tribes." There are  solid 
evolutionary reasons why our species developed the tendency to be wary  of 
those whose physical appearances or behavioral patterns are different  from 
our own. For millions of years an individual's social world was limited  
almost entirely to her village and tribe, and outsiders were, for good  reason, 
considered a threat until proven otherwise. Yet research has shown  that 
this suspicion is malleable, and it fades with exposure. 
With worries on the rise about the country's cultural and political  
divisions, some bottom-up boosts of oxytocin, based on face-to-face  
interaction, 
could help. It might take the form of a domestic  student-exchange program, 
allowing kids from the big cities and small-town,  rural kids to get to know 
one another. The revitalization of urban life,  with its varied and 
crosscutting relationships, is a step in the right  direction, too. One city 
going 
in the opposite direction is Washington,  D.C., where fraternizing across 
party lines—once the norm—is nearly unheard  of these days. Acrimony on 
Capitol Hill reflects, in part, these  oxytocin-starved relationships. 
A few years ago, I began warning visitors to my lab that before they  left, 
I was going to give them a hug. This scares some people, but I've  found 
that my slightly eccentric announcement changes the depth of the  
conversation, making it more intimate, more engaging and more valuable to us  
both. I 
suspect that by forecasting a hug, I'm also signaling how much I  trust the 
person, so I'm inducing a release of oxytocin in their brains.  Those people, 
in turn, will connect better to others and treat them more  generously. 
Nothing grander is required for a virtuous circle to  begin.





-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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