Try GOLD - Free

The Neuroscience of Morality

Scientific American

|

November 2025

One immoral act begets anotherbut so does an act of moral courage

- BY ELIZABETH SVOBODA

The Neuroscience of Morality

IT STARTED WITH AN INNOCENT MISTAKE.

Texas entrepreneur Chris Bentley had founded a company to buy drilling rights for oil and gas. He realized that a batch of letters he'd sent to landowners, offering to lease their rights, had incorrect information, including monetary amounts and other details.

But instead of correcting the errors, Bentley doubled down, not wanting to admit his mistake. When the letters failed to secure enough land leases to generate big profits, Bentley tried to make up the difference by sinking his investors' money into new, risky deals, some of which faltered and drained the coffers of his company, Bellatorum Resources. Then, as the company's cash flow dried up, Bentley started putting bogus transactions on the books to keep his employees paid. He didn't stop until he'd committed $40 million worth of fraud. “I basically did the age-old ‘rob Peter to pay Paul,’” says Bentley, who was recently released from prison into home confinement. “Everything started going downhill.”

Moral death spirals such as Bentley's happen in every sphere of public life, from business to local government to the highest levels of political leadership. The deterioration often begins with a small dishonest act—such as Bentley's decision to bluff his way through what had been an honest error—and mounts until it reaches a point of no return. Some escalating crimes are financial; others progress toward human rights violations or worse.

Brain and psychology researchers are delving into how slides down the moral slope begin and what keeps them going. Initially we may be horrified at the thought of lying, cheating or hurting someone. But as we engage in wrongdoing over and over, our brains tend to grow numb to it. It’s harder to embezzle or kill for the first time than it is for the tenth.

MORE STORIES FROM Scientific American

Scientific American

Scientific American

METEORITE HEIST

Violence, lies and the smuggling of the ninth-largest meteorite in the world

time to read

13 mins

November 2025

Scientific American

Scientific American

Workouts Help to Treat Cancer

Exercise improves survival, limits recurrence, and can be used with surgery and drugs

time to read

3 mins

November 2025

Scientific American

Scientific American

LIFE'S BIG BANGS

Controversial evidence hints that complex life might have emerged hundreds of millions of years earlier than previously thought—and possibly more than once

time to read

17 mins

November 2025

Scientific American

Scientific American

Canyon Wonderland

An underwater robot documents the strange denizens of Mar del Plata Canyon

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

Scientific American

The Math Trick Hiding in Credit Card Numbers

This simple algorithm from the 1960s catches your typos

time to read

4 mins

November 2025

Scientific American

Scientific American

50, 100 & 150 Years

\"A comprehensive study by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory vigorously urges that a $1-billion program be launched to develop a new automobile engine for introduction by 1985 or sooner.

time to read

3 mins

November 2025

Scientific American

Scientific American

Grippy Super Team

Ants form complex chains to carry more than 100 times each ant's weight

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

Scientific American

Human on a Bicycle

Revisiting a classic graphic on the efficiency of motion

time to read

1 min

November 2025

Scientific American

Scientific American

Risky Genes

As genetic risk scores get integrated into clinical care, experts expect patients to gain earlier access to therapies and enjoy better outcomes

time to read

9 mins

November 2025

Scientific American

Scientific American

Gut Virome

Your digestive tract is crawling with viruses— and that's a good thing

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size