The entire point of this argument is saying that morality can be understood, measured, formalized, and calculated scientifically. — Marzipanmaddox
Yes, I suppose morality, as in people's judgements about right and wrong and that sort of thing, can to some extent be understood, measured, formalized, and calculated scientifically. But somehow I doubt that that's what you meant to say, and even if it was, so what? That seems fairly trivial unless you use it as part of a normative ethical argument.
Of course I'm going to use arguments rooted in known science to validate my point... — Marzipanmaddox
In what way do you think that the mechanism of natural selection "validates" your point?
This reply of yours is once again far too verbose, and fails to show that one can derive an "ought" from an "is". Empty words, and far too many of them.
Why don't you just say something along the lines that you value collectives and cooperation, that you think they're a good thing, and that you think that an ideal society could be founded on that basis?
That would be fine. It would just be your opinion, and it would be up for debate. But you keep overstepping your bounds by saying things like that's morality itself. No, it's just your opinion.
— S
Because it's not a fucking opinion. It's an impartial, objective, measurable quality of cooperation within a society. It's not up for debate whether or not ten people can pull a cart with greater speed and efficiency than an individual. The only way the individual can pull the cart farther is when those 10 people all kill each other. Hence, this is why I argue that morality is the system of rules/equations that allows these 10 people to not kill each other. — Marzipanmaddox
Yes, it is an opinion. It is just an opinion which you are calling impartial, objective, etc., etc., when it isn't.
And raising merely descriptive facts which in themselves have nothing whatsoever to do with ethics, i.e. about what is moral or immoral, or what we should or shouldn't do, is to raise points which miss the point. You would have to draw a valid and logically relevant conclusion from them, which you cannot do. You do not seem to understand that it doesn't matter, in itself, in the context of ethics, that ten people can pull a cart faster than one person, or that people in those sorts of situations can cooperate with each other. That doesn't validly support any normative ethical conclusion, about what is good or bad, right or wrong, about what should or should not be done, regardless of whether or not I happen to have any view about the merits of cooperation, or about the fundamental role that it has in societies.
I don't value anything personally. I loathe the human race. I'd rather not see them exist. I'm just arguing an entirely objective point for entertainment sake. — Marzipanmaddox
But the only objective points you've made are ethically irrelevant. It is an objective point that ten people can pull a cart faster than one person. It is an objective point that there exist societies full of individuals who cooperate in many respects, and who by and large follow a set of rules. So. Bloody. What?
It almost seems futile to get through to you. You just keep responding with lengthy blether and more insistences that you are being objective, impartial, scientific, blah blah.
At this point it is a matter of semantics. Is an organ an individual? I can divide the organ out of a person's body. — Marzipanmaddox
An organ is obviously not an individual in the sense that I was using that word, but yes, an organ is an individual organ.
My point is that the organ does not exist or survive without the human body that it is contained within, thus the organ does not function as an individual. It cannot be divided without losing the inherent justification and purpose of its own existence. — Marzipanmaddox
Yes, I already know your point. I am simply criticising it on the basis that it clashes with how we ordinarily talk. The problem stems from your idiosyncratic definition of an "individual", which should be rejected because it leads to absurd conclusions.
A non-functional kidney lying in the street is not a kidney. — Marzipanmaddox
Yes it is. See? This is your problem.