Moral Disagreement and the Psychology of Pluralism
Moral disagreement is one of the deepest and most persistent facts of human life. People disagree not only about policies and institutions, but about loyalty, fairness, purity, dignity, justice, freedom, care, and what it means to treat others well. This article examines moral disagreement through the lens of value pluralism and moral psychology, distinguishing pluralism from relativism while showing how moral conflict can arise from different value weightings, social identities, emotional saliences, and cultural frameworks rather than from simple bad faith alone. It argues that disagreement often reflects the genuinely plural structure of moral life and that a serious psychology of pluralism must explain both why sincere people diverge and how institutions can sustain common life under conditions of unresolved moral difference.









