So what scientific model would you be using to tell whether individual liberty or mandatory mask-wearing is more important to long-term human flourishing? — Isaac
Of course the intention of Divine Command Theory is not to serve human flourishing. — SophistiCat
But I do know some animal rights activists who are far more concerned about animal rights than about human flourishing. — Thomas Quine
compare places where the pandemic is raging out of control at least in part because of a libertarian resistance to mask-wearing and quarantine with those places which at least partly contained the virus by restricting individual liberty. — Thomas Quine
he can get around this by saying that science, although it obviously cannot determine the nature of eternal flourishing, can determine that the notion of eternal flourishing has no grounds and is hence not a valid model. — Janus
Can it? How would it go about doing that? — Isaac
Do you understand what 'science' is? — Isaac
I asked for the science that tells us that mask-wearing is better than personal liberty in the long term. — Isaac
I asked for the science that tells us that mask-wearing is better than personal liberty in the long term.
— Isaac
Are you serious? — creativesoul
the practice of science has clarified the fact that there can be no inter-subjective force to claims that predict nothing that can be observed and agreed upon. This would seem to be the case with the claim of eternal flourishing. — Janus
IT is obvious that kowtowing to what are baseless ideas of individual liberty has greatly reduced human flourishing — Janus
You got me Isaac, I'm not a scientist. That's why I look to people who are.
https://wapo.st/3fdqWXy — Thomas Quine
I asked for the science that tells us that mask-wearing is better than personal liberty in the long term.
— Isaac
Are you serious?
— creativesoul
Of course he is.
"Better than" is a value judgement. Science doesn't make value judgements. — ChrisH
I asked for the science that tells us that mask-wearing is better than personal liberty in the long term.
— Isaac
Are you serious?
— creativesoul
Of course he is.
"Better than" is a value judgement. Science doesn't make value judgements.
— ChrisH
Isaac is perfectly capable of speaking for himself, but since you answered...
So what? I mean, that's not even in question here... is it? — creativesoul
Those who argue that to mandate mask-wearing is immoral believe that individual liberty and personal choice is more important to human flourishing.
Science can tell us who is right. — Thomas Quine
Isaac is (in my view perfectly reasonably) disputing this claim. — ChrisH
It's precisely what's in question here. — ChrisH
Apologies for inadvertently misrepresenting you. — ChrisH
Muddled. Virtue ethics is about growth, becoming; encouraging courage, temperance, liberality, generosity, patience, kindness.
— Banno
I don't think so. What I'm trying to point out is that all those virtues you mention basically consist in caring about others, and of course oneself (that's implicit in the idea that you cannot care about others if you don't care about yourself (caring about yourself, that is, in the sense of caring about what kind of person you are)). I can't think of any definition of morality that doesn't entail caring about others. To care about others is obviously to care about their flourishing, so I can't see how that definition could be wrong. — Janus
I asked for the science that tells us that mask-wearing is better than personal liberty in the long term. — Isaac
My assertion was only that mask-wearing was more conducive to human flourishing than to assert personal liberty as a justification for not wearing a mask. — Thomas Quine
Those who argue that to mandate mask-wearing is immoral believe that individual liberty and personal choice is more important to human flourishing.
Science can tell us who is right. — Thomas Quine
Agreed on the principle, though I'm not sure how 'science' showed this, unless you're taking a really broad definition of science. But the point here is that in order for this "science can show us the way" approach to have normative force, it too has to make predictions, the results of which can be observed and agreed upon, and I see no evidence of that in terms of human flourishing which are clear enough to provide guidance in any real moral dilemmas. For example...
IT is obvious that kowtowing to what are baseless ideas of individual liberty has greatly reduced human flourishing — Janus
Obvious to you, maybe, but if you're going to extend the meaning of 'science' to cover 'stuff you reckon after having a look at the newspapers' then I really think that's too broad. — Isaac
Risks are taken with people's lives for the sake of individual liberty (your freedom to drive a car for example). So it is not the case that 'human flourishing' (among all those who agree with it as a metric) requires that no one's lives are put at risk by anyone's activities - it has been agreed upon that 'flourishing' will contain some activities which carry a risk to others - that sometimes we need to risk life in order to gain a level of freedom which we think worth the risk. — Isaac
Science can tell us who is right — ChrisH
most everyone knows what's right and wrong if they care to give it some thought. — Janus
We know, for example, that raping your neighbours' daughter, killing their dog or breaking into their house and robbing them of all their valuables will not normally be likely to contribute to their temporal flourishing.
You might want to argue that it may be a pivotal aid to their eternal flourishing, or even lead to events which increase their overall temporal flourishing, but these would be indiscernible for our present moral deliberations. — Janus
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