Are babies born moral?
What exactly does “moral mean? Are any moral
absolutes embedded into our brains, or is moral awareness only
culturally understood? These questions have occupied philosophers for
centuries. The word “moral”, in both its Greek and Latin incarnations,
has a strong social underpinning. It originally outlined a code of
conduct, a consensus of manners and customs possessing equal parts
“heartily recommend it” and “don’t you dare.” That’s the definition
we’ll use: a set of value-laden behaviors embraced by a cultural group
whose main function is to guide social behavior.
Why would we need such rules in the first place?
It may have to do with that strong evolutionary requirement for social
cooperation. Some researchers believe our moral sense—really a specific
suite of socializing behaviors—developed to aid that cooperation.
Regular massacres, after all, are not exactly in the best interests of a
species whose effective founding population was less than 18,500
individuals (some say less than 2,000). In this Darwinian view, our
brains come preloaded at birth with certain limited moral sensibilities,
which then develop in a semi-variable fashion, depending upon how we
are raised. “We are born with a universal moral grammar, says cognitive
scientist Steven Pinker, “that forces us to analyze human action in
terms of its moral structure.”
Popular candidates for which moral sensibilities
we possess include distinctions between right and wrong; proscriptions
against social violence such as rape and murder; and empathy. Yale
psychologist Paul Bloom lists a sense of justice, emotional responses to
thoughtfulness and altruism, and a willingness to judge another
person’s behavior. Psychologist Jon Haidt sees five categories: harm,
fairness, loyalty, respect for authority, and something intriguingly
called spiritual purity.
If such moral sensibilities are an innate part of
our brain’s function, we might be able to see shards of them in some of
our evolutionary neighbors. And we can, looking no further than a zoo in
England. Kuni, a female chimpanzee, lived in a zoo enclosure that was
part glass and part open air, mostly surrounded by a moat. One day a
starling hit the glass wall and fell into the cage, and the chimp
captured it. Though apparently stunned, the bird was not physically
hurt, and the keeper urged the chimp to let it go.
What Kuni did next was extraordinary. She picked
up the limp bird, put it on its feet, and tossed it a short distance.
The bird didn’t revive. Kuni seemed to think about this, then devised a
strategy. She picked up the starling with one hand and climbed to the
top of the highest tree in the enclosure with the other hand, looking
like King Kong with an avian Fay Wray. The ape wrapped her legs around
the trunk of the tree, freeing both hands to work with the starling.
With great dexterity, she grabbed both wings of the bird—one in each
hand—and carefully unfolded them. Spreading the wings wide, she next
threw the bird as hard as she could in the general direction of freedom.
The bird missed the moat and landed just inside the bank, where a
curious juvenile ape came over to investigate. Kuni quickly scrambled
down and stood guard over the bird for a long time. She stayed at her
post until the bird could fly away on its own.
This is an extraordinary example of … something.
Though we cannot get into the mind of a chimp, it is one of a host of
observations that suggest animals have an active emotional life,
including, perhaps, notional altruism. Humans tend to have that
altruistic quality in spades, and in much more sophisticated forms than
our genetic neighbors.
If moral awareness is universal, we might also
expect to see general agreement across cultures. Harvard researchers
developed a Moral Sense Test, which hundreds of thousands of people from
more than 120 countries have taken.
A third hint that moral
awareness is innate, which we’ll get to in a few pages, has to do with
the fact that damage to a specific part of the brain can affect the
ability to make certain types of moral decisions.
Why don’t kids just do the right thing?
If children are born with an innate sense of right and wrong, why don’t they just do the right thing—especially as they get older (puberty comes to mind)?
Turns out it’s surprisingly difficult to explain
proactive moral behavior, like voluntarily helping someone cross the
street. Even enlightened self-interest does not fully explain certain
types of human altruism. The road between moral reasoning and moral
behavior is quite rocky. The concept of “conscience” was developed in a
partial attempt to pave over this difficulty. A conscience is something
that makes you feel good when you do good things and makes you feel bad
when you don’t. The late Harvard psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg believed
that a healthy conscience was the top rung in the ladder of all moral
reasoning. But not all scientists think conscience is innate. Some think
it’s a social construct. For them, internalization is the most
important measure of moral awareness.
A child who can resist the temptation to defy some moral norm, even when the possibility of detection and punishment is zero,
has internalized the rule. They not only know what is proper (an
awareness that might have been preloaded into their brains), but they
now agree with it and attempt to align their behaviors accordingly. This
is also sometimes called inhibitory control, which sounds suspiciously
like well-developed executive function. They may be the same thing.
Either way, a willingness to make the right
choices—and to withstand pressure to make the wrong ones, even in the
absence of a credible threat or the presence of a reward—is the goal of
moral development. Which means your parenting objective is to get your
child to pay attention to and align himself with his innate sense of
right and wrong.
This takes time. A lot of time.
One lie every two hours
One reason we know this is by the way kids lie,
which changes with their age. I once heard a psychology professor
discuss what happens when a child first becomes capable of lying, and he
livened up his talk with an old Bill Cosby routine. With apologies to
both the professor and Cosby, here is my recollection of his story.
Bill and his brother Russell were jumping on the
bed in the middle of the night—in violation of their parents strictest
orders. They broke the bed frame, and the snap and crash awakened a
furious father. Dad stormed into the room, pointed to the broken
furniture, and bellowed, “Did you do this? The older boy stammered, “No,
dad! I didn’t do it!” Then the boy paused, a light jumping into his
eyes. “But I know who did. A teenager came into our room from the
bedroom window. He jumped up and down on the bed 10 times and broke it,
then he leaped out the window and ran down the street!” The dad’s brow
wrinkled. “Son, there is no window in this room.” The boy didn’t miss a
beat. “I know, Dad! He took it with him!”
Yes, children are bad at lying, at least at first.
In the magical fairy dust of the childhood mind, kids initially have a
hard time distinguishing reality from fancy, which you can see in their
eagerness to engage in imaginative play. They also perceive their
parents to be essentially omniscient, a belief that won’t be completely
destroyed until the 20-kiloton blast of puberty. The fuse gets lit
early, though, around 36 months, when kids begin to realize that parents
can’t always read their minds. To their delight (or horror), children
discover they can give their parents false information without its being
detected. Or, as the Cosby story relates, they think they can.
The child’s realization that you can’t always read his or her mind
coincides with the flowering of something we call Theory of Mind skills.
Theory of Mind develops over time
What is Theory of Mind? A literary example may
help explain it. Ernest Hemingway was once challenged to write an entire
novel in only six words, and what he wrote is a perfect illustration of
Theory of Mind. That’s because when you read it, it will activate
yours.
For sale: Baby shoes. Never used.
Do these six words make you sad? Make you wonder
what happened to the person who wrote the advertisement? Can you infer
that person’s mental state?
Most humans can, and we use Theory of Mind skills
to do it. The basis of these skills is the understanding that another’s
behavior is motivated by a range of mental states—beliefs, intentions,
desires, perceptions, emotions. Theory of Mind, first coined by noted
primatologist David Premack, has two general components. The first is
the ability to discern someone else’s psychological state. The second
is the realization that although these states may be different from your
own, they are still valid for the person with whom you are interacting.
You develop a theory of how the other person’s mind works, even if it
differs from your own.
Those six words could have been written by a
couple whose baby died shortly after birth, and you feel the pangs of
their sadness. You may never have experienced the grief of having lost a
child; you may not even have children. Nonetheless, using your advanced
Theory of Mind skills, you can experience their reality and empathize.
The shortest novel in the world can reveal a universe of feeling because
of it. Hemingway considered it his best work.
By age 4, a child will lie about once every two hours; by age 6, it’s once every 90 minutes.
Even though Theory of Mind is a hallmark of human
behavior, we don’t think it is fully developed at birth. It is extremely
difficult to measure in very young children. The skill appears instead
to unfold progressively, influenced by social experiences. You can see
this timeline in the way kids lie. Pulling the wool over someone’s eyes
requires Theory of Mind—the ability to peer into someone else’s mind and
predict what they will think if you tell them one thing. The talent
improves over time.
After age 3, kids begin to lie in earnest, though
they usually do so imperfectly. They pick up speed on the nasty habit
with astonishing frequency. By age 4, a child will tell a lie about once
every two hours; by age 6, she will do it every 90 minutes. As a child
grows in vocabulary and social experience, the lies become more
sophisticated, more prevalent, and harder to spot.
This timeline suggested to researchers that
children have an age-dependent relationship with certain types of moral
reasoning, too. Kids might be born with certain moral instincts, but it
takes a while to coax them into their mature form.