Précis: Our moral fate: Evolution and the escape from tribalism
The book uses evolutionary principles to explain tribalism, a way of thinking and acting that divides the world into Us versus Them and achieves cooperation within a group at the expense of erecting insuperable obstacles to cooperation among groups. Tribalism represents political controversies as supreme emergencies in which ordinary moral constraints do not apply and as zero-sum, winner take all contests. Tribalism not only undermines democracy by ruling out compromise, bargaining, and respect for the Other; it also reverses one of the most important milestones of progress in how we understand morality: the insight that morality is not a list of commands to be unthinkingly followed, but rather that morality centrally involves the giving and taking of reasons among equals. Tribalism rejects this insight by branding the Other as a being who is incapable of reasoning.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- 5003 Philosophy
- 4408 Political science
- 2203 Philosophy
- 1606 Political Science
- 1605 Policy and Administration
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- 5003 Philosophy
- 4408 Political science
- 2203 Philosophy
- 1606 Political Science
- 1605 Policy and Administration