Piscivore
Smelling fishy
No, not intentionally. The first person we fool is ourselves.I think you are mostly right, but I don't think he is trying to fool anyone with this.
"Of course not", because science has nothing to say about "goals" at all, let alone "justifying" them.His contention is that this is how all fields of science work and even how science itself works. For example, he says:
Can we justify this goal scientifically? Of course not.
Contrariwise, "morality" is all about "justifying".
No. "Science" is simply a method for testing the reliability of information. if we discover that part of that method does not produce reliable results, we change it- as has been done a number of times. No contradiction there.Does this make science itself unscientific?
Further, "science" itself isn't thought to be "objective" in the sense of "existing independent of the experience of conscious beings". It is meant only to be applied objectively (free from bias) so that the results it produces are as close to objective (existing independent of the experience of conscious beings) as is possible given our human limitations. There is (ideally) no "right answer" decided on before the process is applied.
Contrariwise, "morality" is supposed to be about "Oughts" and "Shoulds", and does explicity state what the "right answer" is- in fact, morality is nothing more than a collection of "right answers"... and some people claim that these are "inherent". Yet they change, all the time, sometimes from one minute to the next. That's a pretty big contradiction.
So he's talking apples and oranges. Science is a method that seeks to describe nature. Morality is not a method at all, as science is, but an inventory of prescribed behaviours.
No. "Science" is defined to mean what we decide it means. Whatever we want science to mean is what it means because there is no objectively (existing independent of the experience of conscious beings) "correct" definition.it would be impossible to prove that our definition of science is correct
The same with "morality". The "correct" defintion is what people say it is, because there is also no objectively (existing independent of the experience of conscious beings) "correct" definition
The goals are subjective, yes. The axioms and defintions follow from the facts and have little to nothing to do with the goals, if they are indeed "objective". If the axioms and defintions are tailored to fit the goals (as is done with morality) then they are subjective and unscientific.I think he is just saying that we have to start somewhere. All sciences have to have some unjustifiable (subjective?) goals/axioms/definitions to start with, and from there objective facts can be derived.
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