BEGIN:VCALENDAR PRODID:-//Grails iCalendar plugin//NONSGML Grails iCalendar plugin//EN VERSION:2.0 CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20240328T092905Z DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200731T050000 DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200731T050000 SUMMARY:Call for Papers - Humanities Journal of Valparaiso (SCOPUS) - Connections between Ethics and Moral Psychology UID:20240328T111828Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6f97df9687-7c6q9 TZID:America/Toronto DESCRIPTION:
Humanities Journal Of Valparaí\;so
\nCall for Papers \;
\nNext Special Issue:
\nConnections between Ethics and Moral \;  \;  \;  \;  \;Psychology
\n \;
\nMoral psychology is an interdisciplinary field where\, among many others\, neuroscience\, anthropology\, experimental psychology\, and philosophy converge in the analysis of the psychological aspects of morality. Although the link between moral psychology and philosophical ethics might seem natural\, only a few philosophical productions have explored the connection over the last years. For some people\, the reason behind this is that while moral psychology deals with descriptive aspects of morality\, philosophical ethics focuses on the prescriptive aspect of moral decisions and actions. For some\, this distinction draws a clear epistemic demarcation between both disciplines where the role of moral psychology in discussions of normative ethics would end up being accessory or even unnecessary.
\nHowever\, a relatively recent line of research within contemporary moral psychology seeks to question the aforementioned delimitation. In this context\, the &lsquo\;dual-process&rsquo\; paradigm pioneered by Jonathan Haidt (see &lsquo\;The social intuitionist model&rsquo\;\; Haidt\, 2001) appeals to the socio-emotional aspects of the formation of moral judgments evidenced by current sciences of the mind to question the idea that the fundamental causes of moral judgments are grounded in rational thinking i.e. the so-called &lsquo\;rationalist model&rsquo\;. Almost 20 years after the publication of the seminal article \;The emotional dog and its rational tail: a social intuitionist approach to moral judgment \;by Haidt\, we still need to create new spaces for discussion and dialogue on the current multiple dimensions of the link between ethics and moral psychology. The following monographic issue of the Humanities Journal of Valparaí\;so will be exclusively devoted to developing debates at the intersection between these two areas of knowledge.
\nThe issue will include an invited translated paper by Jonathan Haidt.
\nManuscript can be submitted in \;English\, Spanish\, Portuguese\, or French \;through the journal&rsquo\;s website.
\n \;
\nDeadline \;for submission of articles is \;July 31\, 2021.
\nThe instructions for authors can be consulted in the journal&rsquo\;s website: \;https://revistas.uv.cl/index.php/RHV/index
\nEditors of the Issue:
\n \;
\nE. Joaquí\;n Suá\;rez-Ruiz - Universidad Nacional de la Plata\, Argentina
\nPablo Ló\;pez-Silva - Universidad de Valparaí\;so\, Chile
\n\n\n\nAbout the Journal:
\nThe \;Humanities Journal of Valparaiso \;(RHV\, for its acronym in Spanish) is edited by the Institute of Philosophy of the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Valparaiso since 2013. The RHV aims to publish unpublished papers in all fields of philosophy\, within the great theoretical and historical frameworks: ethics\, aesthetics\, political philosophy\, metaphysics\, logic and argumentation\, epistemology and philosophy of the sciences (in all its extension\, philosophy of biology\, philosophy of medicine\, of information\, of physics\, mathematics\, technology\, etc.)\, among others. RHV does not subscribe to any particular doctrine and is open to articles from researchers with different philosophical and global perspectives.
\nThe journal indexed in: SCOPUS\, ERIH-PLUS\, DOAJ\, Scielo\, Latindex\, Dialnet\, REDIB.
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