Storm
ThrUU the Looking Glass
Stupid internet, stripping non-verbal communication....Ok...what have you interpreted as me being belligerent? Saying that your conclusions are false? I hope not. In any event, I did not mean it to come out that way, sorry. Maybe I should have used a or two.
What I meant was, saying my conclusions are false without explaining why came off as more argumentative than explanatory.
I don't see how it can mean anything else, I truly don't.It wasn't intentional and it doesn't make a difference in my argument. Let me correct myself:
Asserting that science determines morality does not mean that a scientific fact is necessarily moral.
I agree. To my mind, that means that science does not determine morality.I don't know how more plainly I can put it - one does not logically follow from the other. Morality is a dimension, right? Things can be moral, immoral (to a varying degree) or even amoral. Science being the one to determine which is which does not mean anything that is proven to be the case is moral "by default". Not everything is a necessarily a moral issue at all.
Fair enough.I'm not about to start arguing another person's case. I think I better leave it to MSizer to explain what he meant.
Actually, let's just skip the analogy.It's an analogy. Let's start from the top:
I see how science does not determine morality. I do not see how "science determines morality" leads to anything other than "scientific facts = morals." It's very frustrating (to both of us, I'm sure).Do you see how one does not follow from the other?
Basically, every time you explain yourself, I see you bolstering my position. Then you turn around and say that science determines morality, and I get very confused.
Agreed again.Furthermore, "morality" does not equal "moral". Morality is a bit like speed - it doesn't just mean fast, it also means slow and it can also mean not moving at all. To say that science determines speed does not make everything that is a scientific fact "fast".
Well, saying "your logic is false" without explaining why.Could you point out a contradiction?
Fair enough.It's not my job to show that one does not follow from the other - it's your job to show how it does.
It's about precise language, for me. "Determines" means to authoritatively show something to be true. Science means data, facts.
Science tells us about the world as it is, regardless of what we want. Morality, otoh is all about what we want the world to be.
Saying that science, with no input from philosophy, determines morality is (to me) saying that what is = what should be. That what we want doesn't matter.
I think we agree that minimizing harm is a key element of morality, yes? But science doesn't show us that we should do that. It shows "nature, red in tooth and claw." Rapists increase their breeding oppurtunities, xenophobia strengthens family groups, killing rivals boosts survival rates. All scientific.
It takes philosophy to take what is and imagine something better.