1. Subject of the thread you proposed: if a scientific method ("scientific mind") can objectively establish which acts are morally better ("priority"). — David Mo
2. To know which acts are better than others you need to know what makes a good act and what makes a bad act. — David Mo
3. If that method you propose is scientific and objective, it will be based on a set of observable and quantifiable "good" properties. — David Mo
A typical case in moral philosophy is the combination of the lesser good for the greater number and the greater good for the lesser number. — David Mo
The scientific method (verification, falsification, replication, predictability) is always the best path to objective truths and evidence.
A person using the scientific method in day to day thinking is a person living by a scientific mindset, i.e a scientific mind.
A person living by a scientific mind has a higher probability of making good moral choices that benefit humans and humanity.
Living with a higher probability of good moral choices is to be a person with good morals. — Yourself
You wrote this yourself in your opening remarks. It corresponds exactly to the objections I made to you. I think your attempts to avoid those objections have made your ideas more confused, rather than more precise. — David Mo
-To know which acts are better than others you need to know what makes a good act and what makes a bad act. In other words, what you mean by "good" in a moral sense. — David Mo
-You have not given a single observable and measurable characteristic that allows you to decide that an act is good. — David Mo
-If you want to evaluate which acts are better than others in a scientific way — David Mo
Ignore the argument in the first post, it is outdated. — Christoffer
Not if moral acts in themselves aren't good or bad. We can establish a foundation around well-being and harm that you then use when addressing all data points surrounding a certain choice. If you exhaust and maximize the data to the best of your ability and question your own biases when doing so while strictly following a ruleset of the well-being/harm foundation you are acting morally good by the process of thought itself. The act and consequence has nothing to do with this, it can be a bad consequence and it could be a bad moral act, but the argument I am describing is proposing that the morally good or bad is within the act of calculating, not the act that is calculated out of it. That the act of actively making the effort of epistemic responsibility is what is morally good, not the consequences of the calculated act or the calculated act itself. — Christoffer
As long as you don't do all this, your proposal remains in the field of indefinition and doesn't seem to lead anywhere. If you try it you will find all the difficulties that it entails. You will realize that these difficulties have already been dealt with in moral philosophy many times without finding a solution that satisfies everyone. — David Mo
My objections, therefore, still stand. — David Mo
For the above to make sense, you will have to specify the concept of well being, the precise set of rules that you are proposing, why the well being that you have defined is the basis of morality. You will have to explain how you evaluate different concepts of welfare that men have. Etc. — David Mo
As long as you don't do all this, your proposal remains in the field of indefinition and doesn't seem to lead anywhere. If you try it you will find all the difficulties that it entails. You will realize that these difficulties have already been dealt with in moral philosophy many times without finding a solution that satisfies everyone. — David Mo
Therefore, talking about things like "scientific" or "strictly" does not have much future in the field of ethics. With apologies from Sam Harris, Dawkins, de Waal and others like you who seem to be excited by this possibility. — David Mo
because Chris doesn't even understand half of the criticisms being put in front of him. His responses clearly demonstrate that. — Wolfman
Is there a branch of knowledge that is based on these "four cornerstones" and is not science? I don't know of any.So, by me saying "borrowing the four cornerstones of falsifiability, verification, replication and predictability from the scientific method to apply to the method of thought in order to come to rational conclusions of a situation", does that sound like "using the entire scientific method to research moral choices"? — Christoffer
Is there a branch of knowledge that is based on these "four cornerstones" and is not science? I don't know of any. — David Mo
I have read some of Russell's books on morality. I have never read a reference to the "four cornerstones" of the scientific method applied to morality. — David Mo
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