That's the exact same thing.
To me, "steering" implies a continuous process; that the process of guidance is inseparable from that of goal-achievement. But one may achieve a goal in many different ways. How can steering be fundamental when many paths lead to identical destinations?
And apperently you do use one of your own values: that the customer should get what he wants.
It is not so much a value as a practical consideration stemming from other values.
If they have an interest in the universe around them, then they share a value with humans who have an interest in the universe around them.
That is true. I'll only mention that those civilizations which are not interested in the universe are probably not interesting to us (also, I did say
almost no values).
Whether they will largely make the same scientific discoveries as we have is interesting philosophical issue. It is not something we can be quite sure of.
Our observations of the most distant regions of the cosmos indicate that the fundamental laws of nature do not seem to vary across space or time. So their local universe should act in the same way as ours does.
A core principle of science is that of prediction. And our most powerful theories are those that make the most accurate predictions. The equations themselves are not so important--there are often many ways of formulating the same principle. So how could alien science be fundamentally different if their predictions match the universe?
The only answer I have is that they are made of different stuff--dark matter, say. Perhaps their knowledge of chemical processes is as limited as ours is of dark matter. But even then, you would merely have two sets of knowledge with little overlap, not outright contradiction.
On the one hand, the axioms they believe necessary for science may be so vastly different that their research deals mostly with things we never even imagined while they can't imagine the things we deal with. On the other hand, axioms do change sometimes and it may be that they once dabbled with ideas that we have considered as well.
What axioms are you talking about?
Another poster mentioned symmetry. Nowadays, this is treated very nearly as an axiom, and you would be hard-pressed to formulate a theory that doesn't utilize this. But it's not really an axiom at all. It's an observation about the universe; that the laws seem to be the same no matter what direction you're pointed in or where you are (among other things). Symmetry is certainly not all-encompassing, as is well known on Earth where "down" is a preferred direction.
Perhaps you're thinking of something like "velocity is additive". This was once thought to be true and now is not. But again this is not and never was an axiom; it was an observation that seemed valid for experiments at the time, but further experiments disproved. That's just how science progresses.
Only because people have chosen to draw sets in one way and not another. They do so quite subjectively, and doing it is a value judgement.
Yes; well, language is a funny thing. We all have our own internal definitions which may not match what others thing. And yet communication works.
It was your claim that "normal hearing" is "the state of hearing that gives the greatest survival advantage", so it is up to you to prove which level of hearing gives the greatest survival advantage. Otherwise your definition is useless.
Our hearing organs evolved to strike a balance between various tradeoffs, including both fidelity and energy cost. So I would simply assert that the current setup is close to optimal since that's the way it evolved. Not perfect, since our ears have not had time to adapt much to civilization, but still likely to be close.
So the question is then just "how to you define when the current apparatus is operating normally?". This is harder to answer, but is fairly easy in a negative sense: if it is impossible to distinguish between having a sense organ in a given state and not having the organ at all, then we can call it non-functional. Like the appendix, non-functional organs are at best neutral and at worst a problem waiting to happen.
Size is not much of a constraint to hearing. Plenty of animals have much smaller hearing organs than humans while still hearing much better (by some standards...)
Yes, and those standards tend to be set by survival advantage (well, the gene's advantage, but that's nitpicking).
Or even whether it even has a "purpose" because that sounds awfully teleological.
I sometimes have to force myself to say that organs aren't "designed" to do this or that

. Yes, "purpose" is a slightly dubious term in biology, but organs do have functions.
I don't think a doctor discussing with his/her patient what treatment is necessary for a physical ailment can be called "counselling".
Remember the origin of this thread of discussion--that a great deal of this is only necessary because medicine is insufficiently advanced. Yes, I would definitely like to understand my treatment options if I had, say, terminal cancer. In a case like that, treatment and values are indeed inseparable.
But consider a "sufficiently advanced" medicine. My cancer can simply be removed (by nanobots or whatever) by a procedure no more involved than a haircut. Values don't
need to enter into medicine of this kind.
Of course, there will still people that refuse treatments, the way that (some) Jehovah's Witnesses refuse (some) blood transfusions. But I think this is outside medicine. Dealing with the consequences of these values is within medicine but certainly not any kind of acceptance.
- Dr. Trintignant