Just Babies: The Origins of Good and Evil
Just Babies: The Origins of Good and Evil book cover

Just Babies: The Origins of Good and Evil

Paperback – November 11, 2014

Price
$14.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
288
Publisher
Crown
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307886859
Dimensions
5.17 x 0.6 x 7.99 inches
Weight
7.8 ounces

Description

A New York Times Book Review Editor's Choice "Insightful [and] frequently funny…Bloom manages to translate abstract principles into clear, readable prose, making complex material accessible to the layperson without oversimplifying. His voice is witty, engaging, and candidly quirky…Reveals striking truths about the nature of morality and humanity." -- Boston Globe "Fascinating." --The Atlantic "Bloom has a talent for distilling scholarly work (his and others’) into accessible, appealing prose...He writes with both an authority and an openness that suggest he would enjoy a lively discussion with any skeptics." --Washington Post "Bloom — an elegant, lucid and economical writer — makes an excellent guide...He’s an observer and evaluator who’s not ideologically invested in any one interpretation of the evidence… If he takes exception with moral philosophy’s fixation on depersonalized thought problems, he is just as leery of the notion that morality is entirely based on feelings derived from our evolutionary past. The hard-wired stuff is just the beginning, Bloom points out, and reason has an essential part to play in our moral development, as well." -- Laura Miller, Salon "In a lively, accessible style, Bloom…draws on research into adults from many societies, including the extant hunter-gatherer tribes. And he tackles the moral claims of philosophy and religion, arguing that we understand how the 'amoral force of natural selection' may have instilled the foundations for moral thought and action." --New Scientist "Brisk and authoritative...[Bloom’s] discussion of disgust is particularly good…the experiments he describes are nifty."-- Nature "One comes to Paul Bloom for his unfailingly brilliant psychological research; one stays for the wise and relaxed way he writes about it."-- Jim Holt, author of Why Does the World Exist? : An Existential Detective Story "The rich cognitive and moral life of babies is among the most fascinating discoveries of twenty-first-century psychology. Paul Bloom explains how this work illuminates human nature, and does it with his trademark clarity, depth, discernment, and graceful style."-- Steven Pinker , professor of psychology, Harvard University; author of How the Mind Works "Take a tour through the latest and most amazing research in child psychology, and come back with a better understanding of the strange things adults do. Bloom shows us how a first rate scientist integrates conflicting findings, broad scholarship, and deep humanity to draw a nuanced and often surprisingxa0 portrait of human nature, with all its beauty, horror, and wonder."-- Jonathan Haidt, Thomas Cooley Professor of Ethical Leadership, New York University Stern School of Business; author of The Happiness Hypothesis and The Righteous Mind " Just Babies is an extremely important book. Today it is received wisdom that morality is unreal: our evolutionary instincts are purely selfish. We're also told that human society is built on irrational impulses, that reason and choice count for nothing. xa0A leading experimental psychologist, but also a skilled reader of philosophy, Bloom authoritatively punctures both of these errors. xa0Lively and deftly argued, with admirably fair treatment of opposing views, Just Babies shows that humans inherit a rich basis for morality, but also some disturbing tendencies. xa0Making the best of the good and doing what we can to inhibit the bad is the job of history, culture and reason."-- Martha C. Nussbaum , Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics, University of Chicago; author of Political Emotions "Wonderfully clear and entertaining…If you want to understand yourself, your children, and the psychopath in the next cubicle better than you do at present--read this book."-- Sam Harris , author of Free Will and The End of Faith " Just Babies is a fascinating, original exploration of our sense of right and wrong. Bloom and his colleagues plumb the mysteries of morality by playing games with babies, and in this witty, elegant book, he demonstrates the profound lessons we can gain from their responses. After finishing it, you'll never look at an infant the same way again." -- Carl Zimmer , author of Soul Made Flesh: The Discovery of the Brain and How it Changed the World "In Just Babies , Paul Bloom provides a wonderful, in-depth look at how our morality develops from infancy onward, making the strong case for the subtle interplay of genes and environment in the way we turn out -- a must for social science enthusiasts and parents."-- Dan Ariely , James B. Duke Professor of Psychology and Behavioral Economics; author of Predictably Irrational "Paul Bloom's engaging explorations of the moral preferences of infants set the stage for a book that isn't really ‘just babies’ because it goes deeply into the nature of morality itself, for all of us. xa0This is a book for everyone who wants to know more about the kind of moral beings we are." --Peter Singer , Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics, Princeton University; author of The Life You Can Save "Paul Bloom has such an interesting mind, and it's a rare treat to follow as he tracks the origins of human morality. With clarity and wit, Bloom shows that babies have an incredible amount to teach us—and in these masterful pages, the lessons are full of surprise and delight."-- Emily Bazelon, author of Sticks and Stones: Defeating the Culture of Bullying and Rediscovering the Power of Character and Empathy "’The Origins of Good and Evil’ is an ambitious subtitle, but this book earns it. Paul Bloom combines graceful, witty writing with intellectual rigor to produce a compelling account of how and why people are so wonderful and so horrible.xa0 Drawing on his own pioneering work and the work of many other psychologists, Bloom shows that, from infancy on, the imprint of our creator, natural selection, is evident: we are in some sense moral animals, complete with compassion and a sense of justice, but our “moral compass” can be self-serving, sometimes to gruesome effect. Still, transcendence of a sort is possible; Bloom rightly emphasizes the edifying power of reason and self-reflection, and notes how these tools of enlightenment have led to genuine moral progress. This book, by fostering self-reflection, is itself a tool of enlightenment, and can help humanity take another step toward the good."-- Robert Wright , author of The Moral Animal and The Evolution of God " Just Babies is exactly the combination of penetrating insight, cutting-edge science, and elegant prose that readers have come to expect from one of psychology's best writers and sharpest minds."-- Daniel Gilbert , Edgar Pierce Professor of Psychology,xa0Harvard University; author of Stumbling on Happiness "Paul Bloom is a scientist who knows how to tell a fascinating and charming story. As a new parent, I found Just Babiesxa0not only full of insights into my son's developing moral sense but also a great pleasure to read."-- Joshua Foer , author of Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything "That morality is bred into us is clear from the evolutionary continuity with other species as well as the reactions of young infants long before we can expect moral reasoning and logic. In his lively, personable style Paul Bloom reviews the spectacular new evidence for the early emergence of the human sense of right and wrong." -- Frans de Waal , author of The Bonobo and the Atheist ; C. H. Candler Professor and Director of the Living Links Center at the Yerkes Primate Center"Without God does anything go? No, because we have an evolved moral nature that gives us a sense of right and wrong. But when does this sense develop? Thanks to Paul Bloom and this remarkable and important book, we have an answer—very early childhood. Just Babies is a vital contribution to the scientific study of morality that fills in a major gap in our understanding of human nature, and as a bonus it's a riveting read!"-- Michael Shermer , publisher of Skeptic magazine and author of The Science of Good and Evil "Paul Bloom is one of the best psychologist-writers today. In Just Babies he combines hard data with charming anecdote and incisive analysis to explore one of the most profound questions that's ever confronted mankind: how we become moral beings. He makes an erudite and impassioned case for the primacy of deliberation and reason in our lives–a truth given short shrift in pop psychology."-- Sally Satel , M.D., coauthor of Brainwashed: The Seductive Appeal of Mindless Neuroscience "Bloom makes a convincing case that morality demands compassion but sometimes also overrides it ... An engaging examination of human morality." --Kirkus Reviews "With wit and passion, Yale psychology professor Bloom ( How Pleasure Works ) explores the nature of morality, drawing on current research in psychology, evolutionary biology, and philosophy while discussing which factors appear to be innate and which are culturally determined.xa0Bloom convincingly establishes that the nature of morality is open to scientific investigation." -- Publishers Weekly "With his account sharply tuned to the general reader, Bloom skims along assuredly through the research. He uses the findings to nimbly springboard into discussions of philosophy and psychology, exploring the bases of large moral debates, such as acceptable sexual practices or when killing is justified. Of interest both to parents curious about the inner lives of their little ones and to those seeking a more general, thought-provoking examination of morality, the book offers remarkable insight into our first baby steps as moral beings." -- Booklist Paul Bloom is the Brooks and Suzanne Ragen Professor of Psychology and Cognitive Science at Yale University. He is the author or editor of six books, including the acclaimed How Pleasure Works . He has won numerous awards for his research and teaching, and his scientific and popular articles have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Nature, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Science, Slate , The Best American Science Writing , and many other publications. He lives in New Haven with his wife and two sons. Visit his website at paulbloomatyale.com and follow him on Twitter at @paulbloomatyale.

Features & Highlights

  • A leading cognitive scientist argues that a deep sense of good and evil is bred in the bone.
  • From John Locke to Sigmund Freud, philosophers and psychologists have long believed that we begin life as blank moral slates. Many of us take for granted that babies are born selfish and that it is the role of society—and especially parents—to transform them from little sociopaths into civilized beings. In
  • Just Babies
  • , Paul Bloom argues that humans are in fact hardwired with a sense of morality. Drawing on groundbreaking research at Yale, Bloom demonstrates that, even before they can speak or walk, babies judge the goodness and badness of others’ actions; feel empathy and compassion; act to soothe those in distress; and have a rudimentary sense of justice.Still, this innate morality is limited, sometimes tragically. We are naturally hostile to strangers, prone to parochialism and bigotry. Bringing together insights from psychology, behavioral economics, evolutionary biology, and philosophy, Bloom explores how we have come to surpass these limitations. Along the way, he examines the morality of chimpanzees, violent psychopaths, religious extremists, and Ivy League professors, and explores our often puzzling moral feelings about sex, politics, religion, and race.
  • In his analysis of the morality of children and adults, Bloom rejects the fashionable view that our moral decisions are driven mainly by gut feelings and unconscious biases. Just as reason has driven our great scientific discoveries, he argues, it is reason and deliberation that makes possible our moral discoveries, such as the wrongness of slavery. Ultimately, it is through our imagination, our compassion, and our uniquely human capacity for rational thought that we can transcend the primitive sense of morality we were born with, becoming more than just babies.Paul Bloom has a gift for bringing abstract ideas to life, moving seamlessly from Darwin, Herodotus, and Adam Smith to
  • The Princess Bride
  • , Hannibal Lecter, and Louis C.K. Vivid, witty, and intellectually probing,
  • Just Babies
  • offers a radical new perspective on our moral lives.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Not Just Babies

This book is chock full of stories you'll want to tell your friends about. This book is definitely not just about babies but the little people are interesting. Are we moral from the beginning?
3 people found this helpful
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Good book, a few rough patches

I enjoyed this book overall. It was not at all technical but it was interesting and I would recommend it.
I read some reviews before purchasing this book. I seldom pay much attention to whether people like a book I'm interested in or not, I'm more interested to hear their take on it. One reviewer chided the book for seeming too much like a pithy magazine article, and having now read the book, I might know what the reviewer meant. Too often the author's points were over simplified, and seemed to pass from scientific study to personal opinion within the same sentence. The author seemed to feel the need to spice up? his words by using language of pop culture. This wasn't necessary, it was distracting and even made me a bit suspicious of what I was reading. But these criticisms are likely more about me than about the author. I tend to read more technical stuff; philosophy and law, but here are a few things that rubbed me the wrong way:
He once warns of the possibility? of "demonic genes proliferating and taking over the population, leaving us with a world of psychopaths". I wasn't sure if he was kidding or if there was any study to this affect. Maybe I should have expected this comment when the book has the selling title: Just Babies-The Origins of Good and Evil, so I let it pass. At another point he say that he wishes for a particular study, but he doubts anyone would ever do this study because his "colleagues, more fastidious than I am have ethical concerns." At another point he refers to a lawyer asking "Christ" something. Now it seem to me that the lawyer should be asking "Jesus" something. At another point he mentions how babies seem to prefer those who look most like their mothers; that babies prefer people of the same "race".
But we both know that a baby knows nothing about "race". We, as a society, know precious little about "race" other than what we've learned, often in error. But then he walks this careless language back with a study that shows how this isn't the case when babies are born and cared for in a very ethnically diverse environment. But then he concludes by saying "the seeds of racism are there from the very start, in a simple preference for the familiar."
Now, I don't think that a "preference" is necessarily "racist" but his looseness with these stories and conclusions are confusing in the least. And later he seems to tighten up his language a bit when he speaks of all of this as helping to, "explain our tendency to biologize race. Sometimes thinking, incorrectly, of distinct human groups as if they are distinct species rather than coalitions." At least he is finishing by saying something that needs to be heard and better understood.
After these issues, the rest of the book seemed to go along fine.
A few people complained that the author didn't say much of anything about good v. evil. I congratulate him on this. Psychologically this sort of dualism emphasizes a split that that pits our minds against each other; the I'm right and you're wrong syndrome. This mindset leaves us with neither humility nor the desire to find understanding, forgiveness or common ground because we rule it out from the start.
3 people found this helpful
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This is a cool book and fun to read

This is a cool book and fun to read. I felt there were some long bows drawn in some examples - drawing big inferences about a baby's sense of right and wrong from some very interesting experiments. However it is a highly engaging and interesting book and I am, after all, no anthropologist or psychologist, and I respect Paul Bloom as the expert.
2 people found this helpful
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Overall good book

overall the book was very interesting but I didn't like how he put the thesis at the very end I was confused on what he was really trying to do but again it was a very good 📚,
1 people found this helpful
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A perspective one never imagines.

In this book, “Just Babies: The Origins of Good and Evil,” Paul Bloom argues that even babies are born with a sense of morality which includes empathy, compassion, fairness, and justice. Paul Bloom earned a Ph. D in Cognitive Psychology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Before becoming a professor of psychology at Yale University, he had taught Psychology and Cognitive Science at the University of Arizona during 1990-1999. A vast majority of his research is heavily based on children’s and adults’ understandings of the physical and social world. However, his main focus was on morality, religion, fiction, and art. Bloom was once the president of the Society for Philosophy and Psychology. He is the author of three books along with being the coeditor of Behavioral and Brain Sciences and two others. In his interesting book, Bloom’s purpose in writing is to persuade the reader that babies are not born in blank slates he seeks to win the reader over by saying that babies are in fact born with a sense of morality. Bloom’s book has made appearances on 60 minutes, one on ones, and The New York Times in 2013. Furthermore, Bloom goes on in detail to explain the experiments and research that he has done on babies and their reactions to right and wrong, their interest in punishing those “bad” characters, and the environment in which babies develop in that determines the evolution of their personalities. To start, Bloom used a set of experiments to determine whether or not babies and infants had that sense of morality and justice he claimed. The one study that Bloom explored was where he had character (a) going up a ramp and there were two other characters: (b) and (c). There was
the helper (b) and then there was the character that he called “the hinderer”(c). There were two trials the first one was where the helper (b) saw character (a) struggling to go up the ramp. Because character (a) was struggling, the helper (b) went over and assisted the character (a). The second trial was where, again, character (a) was going up the ramp. However, in this situation, character (c) pushed the character back down instead of helping it go over the ramp the way that character (a) did. Afterwards, the babies and infants were given characters (b) and (c) to choose from. In this case, the result was that more than seventy percent of the infants and babies rewarded the helper (b) and punished the hinderer (c). To be sure that his results were consistent, Bloom switched around the characters, the colors, the objects, and the actions that the characters were doing. However, the same concept was consistent throughout the different studies but ended with the exact same results. By this, babies and infants show that they have a moral sense of fairness and justice. Moreover, Bloom goes on in talking about the evolution of morality which he says is the impact of the different environments on babies’ and infants’ as they develop that determines whether they become psychopaths or people of god. The kinds of discussions that they participate in is also a factor in how wide or narrow their morality is or will become. Many babies and infants have a narrow morality. Babies’ and infants’ narrow morality indicates that they are only open to family members and those that are close to them. Adults, in contrast, have a wide morality where they are willing to have discussions and debates with strangers. They are also open to meeting new people. Bloom goes on and describes research studies that provide evidence that toddlers and infants have a sense of morality along with preferences i.e. a preference to those who are kind to others.
In another study, Bloom and his researchers track children’s distributions of goods by using a variety of controlled settings. In one study, researchers asked six to eight years old to divide an uneven amount of rewards to two imaginary characters who cleaned up their room. Researchers found that many of those children that participated had decided to throw the extra reward away to avoid unfairness among them. Furthermore, there were also children as young as sixteen months that also prefer a character who divides equally among the others and are bothered by unequal distributions. Bloom later discusses these distributions often bend toward injustice and emphasizes that we are born with a sense of distinction among right and wrong. Bloom’s intentions on persuading the reader was successful. The main reasoning behind this is the massive amount of research he and his colleagues had done. Bloom conducted multiple studies that served the same purpose. Because of this, his end results all surrounded the same conclusion: babies are born with a sense of morality. Bloom was extremely successful in providing strong pieces of evidence for his hypothesis. In all honesty, the reader would agree that his of strongest piece evidence was when he ended with the result that babies are born with a sense of distinction among right and wrong. The way in how he conducted the study and how he changed things around to ensure that the results were consistent was extremely promising. Bloom first used six to eight years olds, but then used sixteen month old babies to support the his initial results. The reader believes the only weak aspect of the book was how it ended. The book seemed to just come to an end versus explicitly stating a conclusion and coming to a generalization on what needed to be done to ensure fully evolved morality. The reader believes that he did a terrific job of creating the right kinds of experiments/studies that directed him in the right direction of squishing myths about how babies are born as blank slates.
Generally speaking, Bloom’s intention on persuading the reader that babies are not born blank slates was successful. His concept that babies are born with empathy, compassion, fairness and justice is shown through his experiments/studies and his data. Because Bloom brings such golden information to the readers, many people can make sure that their morality along with their personality evolves in an environment of high discussion and the openness of living a diverse lifestyle. Overall, Bloom’s success was able to allow him to conclude his hypothesis. He was also able to provide strong pieces of evidence for his argument.
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Great read!
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Five Stars

Accurate
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Readable and interesting.

Good book. Scientific with some practical implications
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Readable and interesting.

Good book. Scientific with some practical implications
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Five Stars

easy read; makes you think about who we really are as a species