La mente de los justos
Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion
Jonathan Haidt
Por qué los juicios morales no surgen de la razón sino de los instintos. En unos tiempos como los actuales, de enorme polarización política, resulta inevitable hacernos una pregunta: ¿por qué no podemos llevarnos bien? Seamos de derechas o de izquierdas, demasiadas veces tenemos la sensación de que nuestro adversario, además de oponerse a nosotros, no entiende en absoluto nuestras posturas y ni siquiera lo intenta. Eso hace que las divisiones sociales se estén consolidando, el debate público se convierta en un griterío y que en su mayoría los ciudadanos crean que sólo ellos están en lo cierto.Muchas personas, guiadas por razones morales que en realidad no son fruto de la razón, sino de un tribalismo parcialmente innato, son incapaces de entender que tanto los progresistas como los conservadores o los liberales, los creyentes y los ateos, tienen parte de razón; el conflicto moral les impide verlo.
Fecha de publicación
2021-10-13T00:00:00.000Z
2021-10-13T00:00:00.000Z
publicado por primera vez en 2012
Calificación de Goodreads
4.2
ISBN
9780307455772
Recomendaciones
16
Recomendaciones
2019-04-03T17:39:29.000Z
I’m a big fan of @JonHaidt’s books. The Happiness Hypothesis first got me thinking about happiness (which led to Happy, my last book), The Righteous Mind is tremendous & was part of forming Sacrifice (on Netflix) and now starting The Coddling Of The American Mind. Thanks Jon! – fuente2020-11-09T17:16:25.000Z
Someone asked me how to understand why we seem so divided. The best book I have read on this is the Righteous Mind by Jon Haidt – fuente2021-02-23T05:22:21.000Z
On morality and politics, and on the two kinds of fairness, I can't recommend this book by @JonHaidt too highly: – fuente2020-11-04T17:35:32.000Z
I used to think so until I read this thought-provoking book that has forever changed my views, which talks not only about tribes but also about humans make decisions in ways that are different from how we think we make decisions. – fuente2019-08-23T05:09:34.000Z
The best work on this is a book by Jonathan Haidt “The Righteous Mind: Why good People are Divided by Religion and Politics.” He argues that human beings have deeply entrenched moral intuitions which guide their assessment of reality. Facts matter very little if at all. – fuente2021-06-15T20:05:12.000Z
I love @JonHaidt's book The Righteous Mind so much and I think it all boils down to: "never forget everyone is full of shit including me." – fuente2019-12-05T12:26:29.000Z
@eggheader @OnemuVictor1 @JonHaidt Abeg order two. I read Righteous Mind which he also wrote, and that was a very fascinating book. – fuente2020-09-02T19:31:50.000Z
IMO, these are the top 5 books to read for surviving 2020 and beyond:
▫️ The Blank Slate – @sapinker
▫️ Kindly Inquisitors – @jon_rauch
▫️ The Righteous Mind – @JonHaidt
▫️ Higher Superstition – Paul Gross & Norman Levitt
▫️ Cynical Theories – @HPluckrose & @ConceptualJames – fuente2017-07-26T04:27:21.000Z
“The human mind is a story processor, not a logic processor.”
― Jonathan Haidt, from his brilliant book The Righteous Mind – fuente2016-05-29T22:10:05.000Z
The Righteous Mind by Jonathan Haidt is a really good book; we're all selfish & groupish – fuenteAll about trying to figure out the gap between the red and blue states – Republican and Democrat – and it’s really interesting. – fuente