In a simple experiment, researchers at the University of Chicago sought to find out whether a rat would release a fellow rat from an unpleasantly restrictive cage if it could. The answer was yes. — A new model of empathy: The rat (Dec 2011) by David Brown in The Washington Post
Whatever had the rats in the experiment free their fellow rat (even save a bit of food for them), I wouldn't be surprised is also an aspect of human moral behavior, or perhaps proto-morals of sorts. — jorndoe
Morality is the icing on the cake, the rationalization, for our emotional and social behavior. — T Clark
I think our social instincts are a major source for our moral attitudes, but thinking of empathy as a sort of proto-morality is putting the cart before the horse. — T Clark
One of us hasn't got your post right. — Kenosha Kid
thinking of empathy as a sort of proto-morality is putting the cart before the horse — T Clark
It's not designed for cities of people who don't know one another, can't possibly help everyone who needs it, and have no reason to assume reciprocity. That seems to me where social biology fails and moral philosophy enters. — Kenosha Kid
proto-morals — jorndoe
Rat — jorndoe
What might we learn from such experiments? — jorndoe
That we are more appropriately considered vermin than are rats. — Ciceronianus the White
But what is "the right thing" to begin with? — baker
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