Outline of Morality

I’m putting Right on the left because I always prefer chronological progressions, in tables, left to right.

Right Left
Republican Democratic
Red Blue
Traditional Progressive
Conservative Liberal
Tribal Metropolitan/Cosmopolitan
Small town Big city
Monocultural Multi-cultural
In-group prioritization (e.g. the Ten Commandments don’t apply to out-groups) Out-group acceptance; expansion of the moral circle
Restricted moral circle Expanded moral circle
Restriction of options Expansion of options
Ideology; assertions Conclusions from evidence; science
Anti-education (or home education) to avoid conflicts with tribal mythology and values Education about the reality of the world (e.g. here)
Superstition, animism, seeing every disaster as a portent from God Acknowledgement of reality, awareness of coincidence, and the randomness of the universe
Short-term thinking Long-term thinking
Personal needs The greater good, in a global world
Simplicity [Simplex] Complexity [Complex; Multiplex]
Black and white thinking Understanding shades of gray, and even colors
Zero-sum games, e.g. as when Trump thinks for him to win, everyone else must lose Non-zero-sum interactions that have driven human history and progress
Conformist, to align with traditional values and the tribe; rejecting diversity Individualist, in the sense of allowing people to live as they like; encouraging diversity
Rugged individualist Collectivist minded when necessary, to solve big problems the rugged individualists cannot
Backwards Forwards
Prone to conspiracy theories; unaware of how complex the world is Acknowledgement of complexity, coincidence, and the implausibility of most conspiracy theories

Jonathan Haidt, The Righteous Mind [blog post]

Conservatives, concerned about loyalty vs. betrayal, authority vs. subversion, sanctity vs. degradation Progressive, concerned about care vs. harm, fairness vs. cheating, liberty vs. oppression
Grand Narrative: The struggle to return to a golden past Grand Narrative: The struggle for equality and happiness

Lawrence Kohlberg’s stages of moral development (Wikipedia; blog post):

Obedience to rules to avoid punishment; conformity to group behavior Social contracts; universal ethical principles

Joshua Greene, Moral Tribes (review):

Commonsense (tribal) morality Deep pragmatism (utilitarianism)

Tim Urban, What’s Our Problem? (review):

Primitive mind, “a set of coded instructions for how to be a successful animal in the animal’s nature habitat” Higher mind, which can think outside itself and self-reflect and wiser with experience

George Lakoff, The Political Mind (review):

Conservatives, concerned about obedience, responsibility, and discipline Progressive, concerned with empathy, protection, and empowerment

A point that applies to this entire exercise is that things are not black and white; there are shades of gray, even color, in the way humans deal with reality (while conservatives tend toward black and white, which is so much simpler to deal with).