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Beyond Bad

How Obsolete Morals Are Holding Us Back

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About this listen

Scientific research has achieved what thousands of years of philosophising failed to do: explain why we have morals and how they work. The answers are surprising and frequently disturbing.

Morals have held empires together, kept soldiers marching under fire, fed the hungry, passed laws, built walls, welcomed immigrants, destroyed careers and governed our sex lives. But what if morality's all meaningless rubbish, a malfunctioning relic of our evolutionary past?

This is the provocative argument that Chris makes. This isn't an attack on one set of moral codes or one way of thinking about ethics: it's a call for abolishing the whole caboodle.

He uses evolutionary psychology to show how and why morality emerged: they enabled our forebears to survive and prosper in tribal groups. Today, our morals constrain us, bias us, and push us in the wrong direction.

The biggest challenges our species faces, whether global warming, nuclear proliferation or the rise of the robots, are pan-human. These challenges are beyond what our moral minds were designed to cope with. You can't build smartphones with stone-age axes, and you can't solve modern humanity's problems with tools that are designed to create primitive, competitive groups.

From Chris Paley, author of the 'extraordinary', 'startling' and 'thought-provoking' Unthink, comes Beyond Bad, which shows morals hinder us from achieving what we want to achieve. Beyond Bad is the book that 'does for morals what Dawkins did for God'.

©2021 Chris Paley (P)2021 Hodder & Stoughton Limited
Ethics & Morality Philosophy Morality

Critic reviews

"Truly thought-provoking. Paley puts forth an astonishingly original hypothesis and defends it eloquently, marshalling cutting-edge science to argue against the very idea of morality." (Kurt Gray, associate professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)

"There is a serious challenge here to received ways of thinking for the lay public and professional moral philosophers alike." (John P. Burgess, John N. Woodhull professor of philosophy, Princeton University)

All stars
Most relevant
I found the subject very interesting, especially the later chapters on how people refine their moral beliefs based on external stimuli. However, I wasn't convinced that a lack of morals made you more successful. The experiments cited in Chapter 2 had a number of questionable assumptions like allowing the subjects to define their own "successfulness"

The narrator's tone was quite shouty / aggressive but it worked well with the subject matter.

Interesting concept that failed to convince

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