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Are we born good or evil? (naughty or nice)

By Tom Aglietti

Are we born with an innate moral compass or is it something we develop as we grow?

 

Whether humans are born good or evil has been debated by philosophers for centuries. Aristotle argued that morality is learned, and that we’re born as “amoral creatureswhile Sigmund Freud considered new-borns a moral blank slate. Anyone who has read “Lord of the Flieswill expect children to be fully-fledged sociopaths just waiting to be freed from their adult-imposed shackles to (spoiler alert) start a cult and brutally attempt to kill each other.

Maybe the two most famous opposing views on this debate are those of Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Hobbes describes humans as ‘nasty’ and ‘brutish’, needing society and rules to reign in their instincts in order to thrive; later Rousseau openly criticised him, arguing instead that man would be gentle and pure without the corruption of greed and inequality caused by the class system imposed by our society.

 

Recent developmental psychology studies show there may be some naturalgood” in humanity (or, to be more technical, that at least kids are capable of passing moral judgements at an earlier age than previously thought).

 

One of the studies shown on ‘Babies: Their Wonderful World” was conducted to demonstrate if and at what age toddlers showed a preference towardsgoodbehaviour.

To do this, babies less than a year old were made to watch a puppet show where different coloured shapes acted in ways that were clearly recognisable as morally right or wrong. A red circle is shown struggling to climb a hill while anevilblue square tries to push it back down. Meanwhile, “goodyellow triangle attempts to help the red circle by pushing it up.

After the play, the babies were asked which shape they wanted to play with: evil blue square or good yellow triangle. As you may have guessed, they all picked the latter, the triangle that exhibitedhelpful’ and ‘selflessbehaviour. This applied even for babies as young as seven months.

 

The scene replicates the findings of a 2010 study from the Infant Cognition Center at Yale University, which went further to prove that babies were choosing the puppets because of their actions rather ...

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