The abstract from this article:
"Going
back to Kohlberg, moral development research affirms that people
progress through different stages of moral reasoning as cognitive
abilities mature. Individuals at a lower level of
moral reasoning judge moral issues mainly based on self-interest
(personal interests schema) or based on adherence to laws and rules
(maintaining norms schema), whereas individuals at the post-conventional
level judge moral issues based on deeper principles and shared ideals.
However, the extent to which moral development is reflected in
structural brain architecture remains unknown. To investigate this
question, we used voxel-based morphometry and examined the brain
structure in a sample of 67 Master of Business Administration (MBA)
students. Subjects completed the Defining Issues Test (DIT-2) which
measures moral development in terms of cognitive schema preference.
Results demonstrate that subjects at the post-conventional level of
moral reasoning were characterized by increased gray matter volume in
the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and subgenual anterior cingulate
cortex, compared with subjects at a lower level of moral reasoning. Our
findings support an important role for both cognitive and emotional
processes in moral reasoning and provide first evidence for individual
differences in brain structure according to the stages of moral
reasoning first proposed by Kohlberg decades ago."
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