Moral Psychology for Everyday Life: Overcoming Bias and Building Better Habits
MTA
Tools and exercises based on behavioral ethics to reduce moral blind spots and improve choices
2nd Edition
*Moral Psychology for Everyday Life* explores the gap between our ethical intentions and our actual behavior, moving away from traditional character-based morality toward a "behavioral ethics" framework. The book argues that "good" people often fail to act on their values because of bounded ethicality—structural limits in perception, attention, and memory—and the influence of cognitive biases. By understanding the interplay between "fast" intuitive morality and "slow" deliberative reasoning, the text provides a map of the mental shortcuts and self-serving rationalizations that lead to ethical drift and the "slippery slope" of incremental misconduct.
The book emphasizes that willpower is an unreliable resource for maintaining integrity. Instead, it advocates for "choice architecture"—the intentional design of our environments to nudge us toward better choices. Key strategies include "habit stacking" (linking ethical reflections to existing routines), "precommitments" (setting rules for our future selves during calm moments), and the use of checklists to reduce cognitive load. By making ethical considerations more salient at the point of decision, these tools help reduce moral blind spots in personal relationships, the workplace, and digital spaces.
Beyond individual behavior, the text addresses the powerful impact of social dynamics, such as conformity, authority, and groupthink. It provides practical frameworks for "finding your voice" through moral courage and structured communication. When ethical lines are inevitably crossed, the book shifts its focus to the "repair" process, offering a four-part model for genuine apologies and systematic learning to prevent recurrence. This emphasizes that integrity is not a state of perfection but a continuous cycle of noticing, choosing, and correcting.
The book concludes with a "30-Day Ethics Workout," turning theoretical research into a series of daily drills and reflection exercises. This hands-on approach aims to build "moral muscles" through repetition and environmental design. Ultimately, the work posits that ethical living is a learnable skill. By building robust guardrails and maintaining a practice of self-compassion and humility, individuals can close the gap between who they think they are and how they actually show up in the world.
This book is designed for anyone interested in improving their everyday ethical decision-making, particularly professionals looking to build integrity in their work, individuals seeking to align their actions with their values, parents and caregivers navigating family ethics, and leaders wanting to foster ethical cultures in their teams or organizations. It's especially valuable for those who recognize the gap between their intentions and actions and want practical, research-based tools to close that gap without relying solely on willpower or character-building.
January 24, 2026
81,283 words
5 hours 42 minutes
Get unlimited access to this book + all books published by MixCache.com for $11.99/month
Subscribe to MTAOr purchase this book individually below
Click to buy this ebook:
Buy Now
Full ebook will be available immediately
- read online or download as a PDF file.
$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts!
Have a question about the content? Ask our AI assistant!
Start by asking a question about "Moral Psychology for Everyday Life: Overcoming Bias and Building Better Habits"
Example: "Does this book mention William Shakespeare?"
Thinking...