Abstract
In this concluding chapter, I shall do three things: (1) State the main conclusions that I have drawn in the text and summarize the main tenets of the interpretive-pragmatic outlook on psychology and morality. (2) Raise some relevant objections and challenges to the interpretive-pragmatic framework, which will hopefully elucidate some problematic points and suggest things to work with, in the future. (3) Briefly analyze some central psychological concepts in light of the interpretive-pragmatic framework to illustrate how these concepts can be reinterpreted as moral concepts. This analysis can be considered as a kind of research menu for further theoretical and empirical investigations of psychology as a moral science.