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A Naturalistic Theory of (In)justice : How Neurophysiology and Metabolic Energy Ground the Perception of Injustice

Mirzaeighazi, Shervin LU and Tjøstheim, Trond A. LU (2026) In Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour
Abstract
Across different domains, justice is considered either from a perspective concerning mind-independent features of a situation or from a perspective related to mind-dependent motives, traits or emotions. Although these approaches have generated valuable insights, they remain largely disconnected from each other. What is missing is an integrative framework that can explain how the objective features of situations are translated into subjective experiences and, ultimately, into defensible moral judgements. In this paper, we propose a physiological account of justice perception that explains how the ontologically objective features of a situation are translated into epistemically objective moral judgements. We argue here that the brain's... (More)
Across different domains, justice is considered either from a perspective concerning mind-independent features of a situation or from a perspective related to mind-dependent motives, traits or emotions. Although these approaches have generated valuable insights, they remain largely disconnected from each other. What is missing is an integrative framework that can explain how the objective features of situations are translated into subjective experiences and, ultimately, into defensible moral judgements. In this paper, we propose a physiological account of justice perception that explains how the ontologically objective features of a situation are translated into epistemically objective moral judgements. We argue here that the brain's predictive processing and interoceptive systems register unwarranted energy costs imposed by others as a salient, ontologically subjective state of negative affect through prediction errors elicited in specifically social contexts. This affective signal, in turn, provides the motivational and phenomenological basis for the cognitive judgement—mediated by Theory of Mind—that constitutes a specific moral emotion, such as indignation or outrage. Our naturalistic framework thus illuminates the embodied foundations of justice without reducing moral judgement to a mere physiological response. Although we are proposing a neurophysiological mechanism for justice perception, the content of the cognitive judgement (what counts as ‘unjustified’ or a norm of ‘fairness’) is also shaped by cultural, sociological and anthropological context. Thus, rather than replacing existing philosophical, legal or psychological theories, this naturalistic framework complements them by revealing the embodied cognitive processes that underlie our justice judgements across diverse contexts and cultures. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
justice, injustice, allostasis, neurophysiology, metabolism, theory of mind
in
Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
ISSN
0021-8308
DOI
10.1111/jtsb.70027
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
dec490a7-cf71-4f1f-a4a1-c380b0772238
date added to LUP
2026-01-10 10:04:17
date last changed
2026-01-13 09:03:37
@article{dec490a7-cf71-4f1f-a4a1-c380b0772238,
  abstract     = {{Across different domains, justice is considered either from a perspective concerning mind-independent features of a situation or from a perspective related to mind-dependent motives, traits or emotions. Although these approaches have generated valuable insights, they remain largely disconnected from each other. What is missing is an integrative framework that can explain how the objective features of situations are translated into subjective experiences and, ultimately, into defensible moral judgements. In this paper, we propose a physiological account of justice perception that explains how the ontologically objective features of a situation are translated into epistemically objective moral judgements. We argue here that the brain's predictive processing and interoceptive systems register unwarranted energy costs imposed by others as a salient, ontologically subjective state of negative affect through prediction errors elicited in specifically social contexts. This affective signal, in turn, provides the motivational and phenomenological basis for the cognitive judgement—mediated by Theory of Mind—that constitutes a specific moral emotion, such as indignation or outrage. Our naturalistic framework thus illuminates the embodied foundations of justice without reducing moral judgement to a mere physiological response. Although we are proposing a neurophysiological mechanism for justice perception, the content of the cognitive judgement (what counts as ‘unjustified’ or a norm of ‘fairness’) is also shaped by cultural, sociological and anthropological context. Thus, rather than replacing existing philosophical, legal or psychological theories, this naturalistic framework complements them by revealing the embodied cognitive processes that underlie our justice judgements across diverse contexts and cultures.}},
  author       = {{Mirzaeighazi, Shervin and Tjøstheim, Trond A.}},
  issn         = {{0021-8308}},
  keywords     = {{justice; injustice; allostasis; neurophysiology; metabolism; theory of mind}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour}},
  title        = {{A Naturalistic Theory of (In)justice : How Neurophysiology and Metabolic Energy Ground the Perception of Injustice}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/238741632/MirzaeiGhazi_2026_-_A_Naturalistic_Theory_of_In_justice_How_Neurophysiology_and_Metabolic_Energy.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/jtsb.70027}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}