kuthoer wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:kuthoer wrote:Stalin, stick to the only subject which is " Can science define morality". Morality is taught or forced upon us by the community we live in. What's acceptable in Colorado "possession of a certain quantity of marijuana" would land you in jail in Texas.
Are scientists part of the community? Does some of the knowledge disseminated from community members stem from the scientific approach?
If so, then we can see how science indirectly defines morality.
Yes Stain, scientists are part of the community, but measuring or defining morals by scientific means can't be done.
Those who have autism or some type of mental illness who have problems with recognizing right from wrong may be help with therapy or chemical additives, could be helped by "scientific advancements"
As some of the other posters have said, morality is a figment of imagination. Strictly a human nature that can't be defined by science.
So science can't define abstracts? I'm trying to work out exactly what it is about morality that you think science has no access to.
Cognitively speaking, we interchange abstracts and literal concepts all the time. Time is a literal thing, but our understanding of temporal physics is purely conceptual. Science can't define exactly WHY time works how it does, but we can define the length of a second or a minute or an hour. We also tend to think of time as a spatial line - a second is "shorter" than a minute. Yet temporal measurement and definition is well established within science, and you wouldn't claim that science can tell us nothing about the objective reality of time. Gravity is a literal thing, but we don't understand WHY gravity works, we just define the situations that cause it and how to predict the measurable effects, etc.
Our morality is shaped by us observing the world around us and forming mental conceptions just like time and gravity. Moral problems and dilemmas can be entirely expressed in terms that are, at least in theory, accessible to science. So while we may not be able to define the essence of morality, like we cannot yet define the essence of time or the essence of gravity, I don't see any reason why we should say that it's impossible for science to be able to access morality and define it for all practical purposes. Can you give me an example of a moral problem that exists purely in the abstract, conceptual space of our minds without any reference to or influence on actual, measurable reality?