Well, actually, it is. It's kinda why we are here. — Banno
Interesting. If someone were to say that physicists don't need to pay attention to f=ma, that talking about Newton's ideas was just chronicling and not physics, would anyone here give them credence? — Banno
But comprehending the is/ought distinction is. — Banno
I agree with you - there's a lot of stuff that people present as philosophy but ain't. You provided a list in another thread on what pseudo-philosophy is and it was an eye-opener. — Agent Smith
I up-voted Wayfarer's post because truth be told, our knowledege on consciousness is full of holes and so long as that's the case, people are justified in challenging any position one assumes on the nature of the mind. — Agent Smith
...when he can easily visit a neuroscience database and learn the roles of the Ascending Reticular Activating System and the Central Lateral Thalamus in establishing and introducing content in our conscious states!But neuroscience itself is nowhere near to understanding this process on a practical level — Wayfarer
And not only that.....the available epistemology during their time was not enough to assist them in their work.:up: Thanks for letting us know. Philosophers have blind spots, like everyone else I suppose. — Agent Smith
You yourself are saying science(knowledge) is seperate from philosophy (wisdom).
Without philosophy means without love of wisdom...
Anything not guided by the love of wisdom is guided by something else, no?
Tell me how science can seperate itself from philosophy without being foolish?
Trying to understand nature without first understanding yourself (or in conjunction with) could be THE definition of unwise, on par with trying to gain the whole world but losing one's own soul.
"I was only doing my job!" — Yohan
That is because you assume that thought is reducible to neuroscience, which is precisely the meaning of 'neuroscientific reductionism — Wayfarer
-Criticisms based on metaphysical worldviews are useless in Epistemology. What they need to provide is objective independently reproducible evidence in favor of their alternative framework.There are many criticisms of neuroscientific reductionism which are too voluminous to try and give an account of here. — Wayfarer
-Your argument makes no sense from a scientific perspective. Meaning is a characteristic infused in our conscious states by an other property of mind known as Symbolic Language. it turns out that reasoning affections and emotions in to feeling and concepts has an evolutionary and survival advantage for organisms with brains. Not only its is a necessary ingredient of our conscious states,but we can accurately decode the semantic content of conscious thoughts by just read brain scans (Carnegie Mellon 2017)But I would argue that it's a mistake to ascribe semantic content to neurological data. Semantic content, which is the content of meaningful statements, is of a different order to the kinds of data the neuroscience deals with. Saying that neurobiological signals 'mean' something or 'transmit meaning' is projecting semantic value onto neurological signals — Wayfarer
-This is a common misconception based on personal incredulity and the result of a wishful thought . A quick search in a popular databased of Neuroscience can reveal to anyone that we know a great deal of things on how meaning arises in our brains and which mechanisms are responsible for this mental property.But neuroscience itself is nowhere near to understanding this process on a practical level. — Wayfarer
-This is an other factually wrong statement about science.So neuroscientific reductionism is said to commit the 'mereological fallacy', that is, the ascription of what conscious agencies are able to do, to only one part of the organism, namely, the brain. — Wayfarer
Besides, that is not the point of the emerging science of biosemiosis is the sense in which signs (and therefore meaning) are inherent in all living processes, even very simple ones like single-celled organisms. That is in turn connected with the view that rational sentient beings such as ourselves don't live in a world comprising physical objects, but a world comprising meanings - the meaning-world or 'umwelt' which is interpreted by us as (among other things) a physical domain. — Wayfarer
Life is the emergence of meaning. — Wayfarer
-The Null hypothesis doesn't allow precognition to be assumed as part of our Default position for the emergence of life.So this contention that life was 'the outcome of atoms which had no precognition of the end they were achieving' is, shall we say, deeply questionable. — Wayfarer
Correct, I suggest a method that can help us produce objective moral evaluations based on a common characteristic of known moral judgments.Look again at this. See if you see a problem. You are not telling us what to do, but just how to "figure out what to do"... — Banno
AH, so because you did not mention the word ought, you are not telling us what we ought to do. Your claim is that you are telling us only how things are.
If you are not telling us what we ought to do, you are not engaged in a moral discourse.
Hence, your posts are of no use in deciding what we should do.
Ethics is a lot more involved than just a bit of applied biology. — Banno
Unlike yourself, I don't rule out the perspective provided by philosophical theology or religion generally, insofar as they provide a cosmic grounding for ethics. — Wayfarer
It remains that the choice of creed is yours. It remains that you cannot just dump your moral responsibility on to god, any more than Nickolasgaspar can dump it on the wellbeing of society. — Banno
First of all you seem to ignore the definition of scientism. I am the first to reject the basic premises of Scientistm (1.Science is the only source of knowledge and 2. Science can explain everything).You and I ought be working together to show Nickolasgaspar that there is more to ethics than physics. Have you noticed his profile image? The Scientism is strong in this one. — Banno
Again, you have here claimed that the wellbeing of society is what we ought do.
Why? — Banno
-I described what we identify as morality. My system just uses this acknowledgment as a way to produce moral evaluations. Do you have a different opinion on what morality describes in our interactions? Do you believe that we accept acts as moral even if they do not promote the well being of others and our society as a whole?You havn't grounded your moral system, just assumed it. — Banno
Well, no, it doesn't. Morality is about what one ought to do. — Banno
Perhaps we ought abandon the notion of society and instead return to living as wild, individual beasts. Or perhaps for the good of the planet we ought eliminate humanity altogether. — Banno
You've skipped from an is to an ought, without providing a justification. That we are social animals does not imply that we ought to be. — Banno
-Ok I c you get which process enables the need of moral evaluations. So what exactly is you objection?Rocks are neither good nor bad. Morality is about what we should do around others. Hence, your view is wrong. — Banno
Its a Pragmatic Necessity, no a fallacy. There is a huge difference there.The naturalistic fallacy again. — Banno
I don't know what sovereignty has to do with the moral evaluation of behavior between human beings.There are moral systems that say the opposite; that what is right is the sovereignty of the individual, even at the expense of the greater good of society. — Banno
But someone else might say, using the exact same metrics, " Ah, you just wait another 20 years, you'll find that society as a whole has benefitted from allowing/encouraging action X more than enough to make up for the temporary harm it did" — Isaac