About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all books by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Title

BOOKS
About the AEI Press
Orders and Shipping
Book Reviews
Press Releases

AEI Classics

AEI is rereleasing some of its most prescient and groundbreaking works from its earliest thinkers and innovators. These books, part of a series called AEI Classics, are available for download as Adobe Acrobat PDFs.

E-NEWSLETTERS
Enter e-mail:
 

Home >  Books >  The Moral Sense
The Moral Sense
Print Mail
By James Q. Wilson
Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000
The Moral Sense
Dimensions: 9.25'' x 6.25''
336 pages
Free Press
Publication Date: November 1997
Paperback
ISBN: 0684833328
Hardcover
ISBN: 0029354056

In this age of self-gratification and widespread lawlessness, author James Q. Wilson takes the unfashionable view that a moral sense is part of our basic nature, albeit one that competes with our narrowly defined self-interest.

In this lucid, elegant, magisterial and controversial essay, the eminent social scientist, a public policy professor at UCLA, punctures the tenets of neo-Darwinian biologists, cultural relativists, Freudians, behaviorists and anthropologists. Social bonds, he argues, are not entirely a matter of convention or a tool to ensure perpetuation of the species. Instead, our moral faculties--sympathy, fairness, self-control, etc.--grow directly out of our mutual interdependence as social animals.

Wilson believes that the moral sense is formed as the child's innate disposition interacts with earliest familial experiences. Self-restraints on appetites are built into the "primitive" limbic brain, he stresses. Perhaps his most controversial thesis is that men and women differ in their moral orientation, with men more inclined to emphasize justice and emotional control, while women stress sympathy, caring and cooperation.

James Q. Wilson is the chairman of AEI's Council of Academic Advisers.



Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments

Chapter 1: The Moral Sense

Part I: Sentiments

Chapter 2: Sympathy
Chapter 3: Fairness 
Chapter 4: Self-Control
Chapter 5: Duty

Part II: Sources

Chapter 6: The Social Animal 
Chapter 7: Families
Chapter 8: Gender
Chapter 9: The Universal Aspiration

Part III: Character

Chapter 10: The Moral Sense and Human Character

Notes
References
Index

Related Links
Order from Barnes and Noble
Order from Amazon


Making a Killing
Making a Killing

In Making a Killing: The Deadly Implications of the Counterfeit Drug Trade, AEI resident fellow Roger Bate analyzes the burgeoning international trade in counterfeit drugs and recommends steps that governments and law enforcement agencies could take to stop it.


Air Quality in America
Air Quality in America

This detailed, data-driven book rebuts mistaken perceptions that U.S. air quality is bad by documenting marked improvements over the past decades.


Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge- thumbnail
Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge

The promise of "healthy aging" offers significant opportunities for economic growth and development for Europe in the decades ahead--if governments and citizens are willing to grasp them.