Kevin_Lowe
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- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
Okay. For no good reason on my part, I thought you were specifically denying that.
If I had been, that would have been pretty silly.
And this confirms for me the correspondence between our study of health and the purported study of morals. At some point, we have assigned intrinsic value to certain outcomes - an ability to walk, life, perceived well-being, an absence of a specific disease - within humans. But these values are as arbitrary as "higher pleasures". Science cannot show us that they are correct or incorrect. Yet we go ahead and use all of them to make statements about which actions improve 'health' as though we have something meaningful to say. And I don't notice endless threads on this forum pointing out that science cannot answer health questions.
That health is good and morbidity/mortality is bad is one of those value judgments that is so widespread that it almost never comes up for discussion. However it is still merely a value judgment.
The debate about when treatment is appropriate for potentially terminal conditions and when it should be abandoned in favour of palliative care, or indeed euthanasia, illustrates that we are dealing with value judgments about how we wish the world to be, not purely factual matters.
Similarly the conflict between those who would label autism a mental disorder and those who would label it "neurodiversity", and the conflict between those who consider deafness a disability and those who do not show that there is also scope for people to disagree about whether certain states of being are pathological or not.
Science can only answer health questions once we have made a prior value judgment of some sort about what kind of states of being are preferable to others. It's uncontroversial because our judgments on these matters almost always line up with those of everyone else, so it's very rare for anyone to pick nits about it. In such discussions I just assume everyone agrees that mortality and morbidity are bad and do not make an issue of it.
"Ebola is something which it is morally good to prevent" is still a value judgment, even if it's a highly uncontroversial one. You can't infer from the fact that nobody picks a fight about a given moral claim, that the moral claim in question is a scientific truth.
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