The meeting I had Wednesday was quite interesting.
The good news is that there is a tremendous amount of experimental data that is
consistent with the idea that values converge on consequentialist ideas, over time. And, even though there might NOT be anything that directly tests the idea, we can introduce a variable or two into existing experimental protocols to do so. So, at the very least: There CAN be an empirical basis upon which the theory of moral truths rests, that I am promoting.
For example, we can set up a variation of Muzafer Sherif's Robbers Cave Experiment (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robbers_Cave_Experiment#Robbers_cave_study ), where a few people are persuaded to dissent from the best interests of their fellow in-group members, in various ways.
The bad news is that no one wanted to commit to the final step, and say that science is telling us what our values ought to be.
To that end, I would first ask this: IF God existed, and God made decrees about what we should and should not do, would that (hypothetically) count as an Objective Morality? Most people, including error theorists, would seem to say yes. If not, then the word would have no meaning, and it would be pointless to continue on those grounds.
Once that is accepted, I would claim that: All I am doing is substituting God for natural processes. If natural processes tend to have us converge on certain values, and if we have no control over what those values are going to be: That societies will always be running back, or crawling back, to them whenever we veer off of them for too long, it would be not be philosophically different from God making a decree. Except, in this case, there is no God entity. Just a virtual "decree" about what our values ought to be, from nature.
However, even that was dismissed as just being philosophy and not science. We will have to work on that, I suppose.
Though, for the purposes of my debate: I think I can, at the very least, make a convincing case that:
By investigating moral truths, we have a better opportunity to learn more about our values. If we dismiss them as non-existent, (and were merely efforts to control people in the past, as error theory is prone to do), then we would be less inclined to be able to do that.
There is no guarantee we would find objective truths, nor am I claiming error-theory is non-progressive. I am claiming that the hunt for objective truths will make us
a lot more progressive than error-theory would.
If you'd like to drop the unlikely claim that every moral reason is fundamentally selfish, then we can move on.
Why would I do that?
It has
already been well established in accepted science that selfish systems can become altruistic, once it is recognize that
acting altruistic is in the best interest of the selfish entity. That has been a standard part of evolutionary biology since about the 70's, and has not fundamentally changed since.
Perhaps you should read up on the subject.
But, (to stay relevant to the intended topic of the thread), even if I was wrong, that does not mean objective moral truths don't exist. Whatever takes the place of this idea would then be upgraded to an aspect of moral truth.
Even if God doesn't exist, the presumption that those who invoke God really believe in God and fear eternal justice is enough to explain their behavior.
But, the values they have don't come from nowhere!
They might oppose X behavior, claiming God opposes it. But, a researcher figures out that, historically: X behavior decreased the power and wealth of religious leaders; then the REAL reason X is opposed is because those religious leaders conspired against it!
What is weird, here, is that
no one needs to know what the true reasons were! The faithful would not. Perhaps not even the current generation of leaders! (Assuming the conspiracy was hatched in past generations.)
Only through careful study of the history of X behavior was that true motive revealed!
Imagine if the same thing is happening to YOU! You might assume, for example, that you think "it's wrong to break deathbed promises", on altruistic grounds that it harms others. But, what if the true, hidden reason is because, historically: Societies that broke deathbed promises were worse off, than those that largely kept to them. Perhaps it was because it reduced trust among people to be sufficiently problematic in other situations. And, your physiology is tapping into that historic lesson, without even realizing it.
This is pure magic. The thought that, if I don't do it even in situations where my action is undetectable then others won't either is simple magical thinking.
I said it was a statistical connection, not a casual one. This is not a roulette wheel, where each spin is an independent action from any other. (Assuming it was a fair game.)
Stealing in moments where you think your actions will be undetectable DOES tell us something about whether or not such thefts will occur, in the future, under similar circumstances. Though, we would need a good sample size to demonstrate that, effectively.
I'm speaking of those rare situations when I indeed won't be caught.
Then your thinking is fine, but trivial, and irrelevant to my point.
In the real world, the worry about getting caught is a real one, and an increasingly worrisome one for potential thieves. And, THAT changes the game strategy, and how we approach the morality of the subject.
It is important for me to emphasize that, because if such things can be demonstrated, it becomes an example of a manner in which morality converges on certain values. Your plain point is not part of that mixing bowl.
You are assuming a utopian situation: a land of milk and honey. This is not the actual human condition based on the limit of consumable goods.
If we approach economics with the goal of building something that can, objectively, be called a "utopia", (that is: Not merely the delusions of mad men, but a society that really IS objectively best for all citizens!); we are more likely going to hone in on strategies to find one, or something close to one. If we all assume it can never be done, we are forever deprived of our potential.
That our altruism is expanding, so that more and more people are in our "in-group", and the very idea of there even being a true "out-group" is declining, is a sign that this could happen.
I was also recently reminded of John Rawls' Theory of Justice: That the rules of society work out best for everyone, if you don't know what role you will be playing in that society, before you make the rules. (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Theory_of_Justice) I think more people are innately realizing this, and that could be part of a natural path towards "objective utopia".
The real danger is declaring to have the right strategy too early. It might be in the best interests of building a Utopia that we never assume we actually found it, yet, and always leave our assumptions of such things open to skeptical investigation. Utopias would always and forever be Provisional Utopias.
Perhaps we don't speak of the same "Nature". Can you scientifically define "Nature", please?
Nature is natural processes. Perhaps you really take issue with the word "decides"? If so, perhaps you will accept this non-anthropomorphic variation:
Natural forces converge on what objective truths will be. We can try to tap into that, or not. People can accept them, or not. If not, then it's to their own peril.
Here you are objectively wrong. Not only Hume, Camus and Dostoevsky practised the alternative moralities which I had spoken above, but they were celebrated people and died without any peril derived of their beliefs.
If their beliefs were truly bad for society, then society would have eventually figured that out! Those three happened to be either right, or at least benign, towards well-being.
Another example, Karl Marx, turned out to be largely wrong: Although many with power followed his ideals for a long time, they eventually crumbled.
There are others who are hybrids: Ayn Rand, for example, was right about individual rights being important (it keeps the despots at bay); but she was wrong about laissez-faire capitalism being the way to do it (since there are certain types of exploits only a governmental system can squash).
The idea that Nature punishes the bad guys is illusory and derives of the religious belief in a Justice God. It is a consolation belief. No. Nature is morally indifferent, cold, frozen I would say. Let Nature quiet and let us search for morality elsewhere.
My idea is not nearly as naïve as that:
People punish the bad guys. But,
we can also make predictions on what sorts of actions people will want to punish,
based on studying the nature of moral systems.
If you accept that, then: What you really object to is my use of anthropomorphic language for nature, not the ideas I am trying to promote, themselves. And, I suppose that is a bad habit I am going to have to try to lose.
I highlighted to problematic part. In this case we apparently already have a normative premises: schools ought to be productive. As such we can use this normative statement with scientific evidence to determine what we ought to do to make sure that schools are productive.
What if I told you that natural forces will tend to converge on "productivity of schools" to be something we should value, as that contributes to societal well-being?
This is not controversial at all. The problem is when people begin with a descriptive claim such: "corporal punishment has a negative impact on student productivity" and then turn it into a normative statement such as "corporal punishment is bad" without mentioning or justifying the original normative statement.
Pardon my use of abbreviations. Is this better?:
Corporal punishment is bad because it has a negative impact on student productivity, and student productivity is important for the overall well-being of the society.
I assume that is not going to be terribly controversial. Where the REAL controversy is introduced, I think, is my claim that science can tell us this is something to value. To demonstrate why, I would append even more words to the end:
Corporal punishment is bad because it has a negative impact on student productivity, and student productivity is important for the overall well-being of the society, and well-being is a value we will always tend to converge on from inescapable natural processes acting upon us.
Now you just have to define "good", "our" and "well-being".
I have already done this a dozen times. Here is the summary:
Well-Being: The overall health, wealth and happiness.
Our: All of the people in the society we live in.
Good: Improves upon, or at the very least: Does not detract from.
"Good for our well-being" = Something that improves upon, (or at the least, does not detract from), the overall health, wealth, and happiness of everyone living within our society.
Is Pope Francis good enough to demonstrate the general trend?
Yeah, but so far the only people I've seen that have supported that belief has been crackpots and philosophers. Not a good sign!
And, if I am wrong about that, then objective moral truths will be discovered through proto-science instead of formal science. The incline of well-being might look different, but will still trend in the same direction, towards improvement.
What is the highlighted part but a statement of faith?
See this highlighted part:
No, science is NOT, itself, a form of faith. It is grounded in objective reality,
that can be independently and reliably verified by disinterested parties.
Ah yes, Reductio ad absurdum. Wonderful.
Like I said: Don't shoot the messenger.
If it becomes increasingly persuasive for people to accept scientific facts for the foundations of their morals, even if it takes a few generations to do so, then the Naturalistic Fallacy is something everyone ends up doing. Complaining to me about that, won't change it.