Situationism and the Neglect of Negative Moral Education J. P. Messina & Chris W. Surprenant Accepted: 26 December 2014 # Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2015 Abstract This paper responds to the recent situationist critique of practical rational- ity and decision-making. According to that critique, empirical evidence indicates that our choices (1) are governed by morally irrelevant situational factors and not durable character traits, and (2) rarely result from overt rational deliberation. This critique is taken to indicate that popular moral theories in the Western tradition (i.e., virtue ethics, Kantian ethics, and utilitarian ethics) are descriptively deficient, even if normatively plausible or desirable. But we believe that the situationist findings regarding the sources of, or influences over, our moral agency do not reflect durable features of human nature, and claim that these findings are a byproduct of a deficient approach to moral education. Existing models of moral education, which are positivein nature, do a poor job of developing virtuous people. Instead, we argue that a negativeapproach to moral education, traceable to Locke, Smith, and Rousseau, would be more successful. This strategy represents something of a com- promise between the strategies adopted by thinkers like Rachana Kamtekar (Ethics: Int J Soc, Polit, Leg Phil 114 (3): 458491 2004), who argues that traditional moral categories escape largely untouched by findings in social psychology, and John Doris (Noûs 32(4):504530 1998) and Gilbert Harman (Bus Ethics Q 13 (1): 87 94 2003), who argue that findings in psychology prove our traditional moral theories are defective. Keywords Moral education . Situationism . Social psychology . Virtue Ethic Theory Moral Prac DOI 10.1007/s10677-014-9558-0 J. P. Messina Department of Philosophy, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive # 0119, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA e-mail: jamessin@ucsd.edu C. W. Surprenant (*) Department of Philosophy, University of New Orleans, 2000 Lakeshore Drive, New Orleans, LA 70148, USA e-mail: csurpren@uno.edu