CONN 393
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The Cognitive Foundations of Morality and Religion
Department(s)
Course Description
Cognitive science is the interdisciplinary study of the mind that exists at the intersection of philosophy, psychology, neuroscience, evolutionary biology, and anthropology among other fields. There are now burgeoning research programs devoted to developing accounts of the cognitive foundations of morality and religion. This is an upper level survey of some of the leading views from these fields. Topics to be covered may include: the role of emotions and reason in moral deliberation; the nature of our moral intuitions; whether the scientific study of the mind can help us decide between competing moral theories; whether cognitive scientific accounts of moral psychology show morality to be a sham; the elements of mind involved in the formation of religious belief; whether religion is a kind of evolutionary byproduct; whether religion is a part of human nature; and whether scientific accounts of the cognitive foundations of religion show religious beliefs to be irrational.
Career
Undergraduate
Catalog Course Attributes
CO24 - CONN (Connections 200-400 Level), CORE - CN (Connections), INTD - BIOE (Bioethics BIOE), INTD - HON-MN (Honors Minor (Fall 2023+) HON), INTD - HUM-SCIVAL (Intd Humanities-Science IHE), INTD - NRSC-MN (Neuroscience Minor NRSC), INTD - NRSCMJARTS (Neuro Arts Major NRSC), INTD - NRSCMJBIOE (Neuro Bioethics Major NRSC), INTD - NRSCMJECON (Neuro Economics Major NRSC), INTD - NRSCMJPHIL (Neuro Philosophy Major NRSC), INTD - NRSCMJSPIR (Neuro Spirituality Major NRSC), INTD - STS (Sci Tech Health Society STHS)
Min Units
1
Max Units
1
Name
Lecture
Optional Component
No
Final Exam Type
Yes