Seeing Wrongness

Publication date

2025-10-15T15:02:37Z

2025-10-15T15:02:37Z

2024

2025-10-15T15:02:37Z

Abstract

This paper examines the plausibility of an attention-based version of moral perceptualism (amp). According to amp, our perception of moral properties is characterized by perceptual attentional patterns that reflect a sensitivity to morally salient features. First, I argue that the explanation for the empirical evidence offered to support amp primarily hinges on cognitive processes rather than perceptual ones. Second, while I acknowledge the critical importance of attention in recognizing moral properties, I contend that we must expand amp’s explanatory scope to address the question of what drives this attention. I propose an account of our (in)sensitivity to wrongness that builds on amp’s core statement. In this account, the notion of salience structure of information, defined by the varying accessibility of both perceptual and cognitive representations, plays a central explanatory role.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Koninklijke Brill

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1163/17455243-20244289

Journal of Moral Philosophy, 2024, vol. 22, num.3-4, p. 314-335

10.1163/17455243-20244289

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Rights

(c) Toribio Mateas, Josefa, 2024

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