
The Moral Science Podcast
A psychologist who is endlessly fascinated with human morality interviews experts who dedicate their careers to understanding it.
Latest episodes

Jun 25, 2019 • 1h 2min
"Stupid Rules": Social Domains and Moral Development with Larry Nucci
Dr. Larry Nucci is an adjunct professor in the Graduate School of Education at UC Berkeley, an emeritus professor of Psychology at the University of Illinois, Chicago, and the editor-in-chief of the journal Human Development. His research pertains to the social and moral development of children, and he’s worked to apply social domain theory to moral education programs. In this podcast, Larry and I discuss his work with Elliot Turiel to flesh out Social Domain Theory against the backdrop of Richard Shweder’s three ethics, and the later emergence of Moral Foundations Theory.
Notes:
For more information and resources about Larry Nucci and Social Domains theory, visit this website.
Richard Shweder's three ethics.
Teaching resources and recommended readings can be found at: https://www.moraledk12.org/
Jonathan Haidt's study of morality in Brazil.
Articles that address the relativism of Moral Foundations Theory (in addressing rape of Yazidi women): Character as a Developmental System, Recovering the Role of Reasoning in Moral Education to Address Inequity and Social Justice.

Jun 11, 2019 • 1h 9min
A Brief History of Moral Psychology with Sam Hardy
Dr. Sam Hardy, an associate professor of psychology at Brigham Young University, describes the branches of moral psychology that emerged in the wake of Lawrence Kholberg's theory of cognitive moral development.
Notes:
Video about Kholberg's theory of moral stages
Richard Shweder's three ethics
Moral foundations theory website
Jonathan Haidt's "The emotional dog and it's rational tail: A social-intuitionist approach to moral judgement"
Moral identity approaches: Blasi's moral identity, Colby & Damon's book on moral exemplars, Larry Walker's lay conceptions of morality
Turiel & Nucci's Social Domain Theory
Dan Lapsley's book, Moral Psychology
Simpson effect example: paper of relationship between conscientiousness and neuroticism