R
Russell_SA
Guest
Some definitions of terms:
Philosophy is just the discussion of thought.
Science a philosophical process to justify the conclusion of thought about reality. To see if reality matched their conclusions, thus reinforcing their belief that they used a correct application of logic.
So science is the study of reality.
Reality = to know = to exist - anything that manifests in a detectable way in space and time.
With enough data on what it is to be human, we can apply that to the group of humanity and come up with conclusions about objective and subjective morality.
The reference point of objective or subjective is from the subjective reference point of human well-being. Just like nutrition is subjective to pick apples instead of pears. But it is objectively true to not consume poison. Once the reference point of “nutrition” is subjectively selected as a reference point.
Moral dilemma - The run away train and you get to pick path a or b for it to go down. Either path will result in the death of people. Can science solve this? The amount of information you know about the problem determines it’s level of moral issue. Same amount of people killed either way? Is one person the scientist working on the cure for cancer and the group just pedestrians? Is the group all death row inmates and the individual on the other track your mother? What makes this a moral dilemma its its affect on the person at the switch who has to make a choice. The more we can function after the action without it weighing on our psychological well-being appears to be a bar that we set for morality. Not sure if that is always the case, but it works for this example. People are going to die no matter what the switcher chooses to do. They have to make a choice that they can live with. Some may end up just walking away from the situation all together since the results are horrific regardless of what they do, so they’d just assume not be apart of the story. But walking away and not trying anything would not be something that someone else could live with. See it’s the results of the psyche of the person that’s at the switch that is making the choice a moral one or not because they have to be able to live with the consequences of their actions or inactions. Use psychology to determine the level of the person’s mental well-being after the event. That is science. The switcher’s manifestation of their well-being after that event is observable in reality and as such able to be studied in science. There is no absolute morally correct path to take here when you have limited knowledge of your actions and it’s affect on the results. Just being witness to the inevitable terrible result does not make your inactions immoral. Not doing anything about the events that caused that tragedy afterwards is where the immoral action takes place I believe. This is because we have evolved the ability to empathize with our fellow creatures and would want someone to make the world safer for us. So we understand those that have the power and the knowledge to fix bad situations are under a social obligation to protect their tribe members through our evolutionary social development.
Philosophy is just the discussion of thought.
Science a philosophical process to justify the conclusion of thought about reality. To see if reality matched their conclusions, thus reinforcing their belief that they used a correct application of logic.
So science is the study of reality.
Reality = to know = to exist - anything that manifests in a detectable way in space and time.
- So I would argue that a meteor that is on a collision path to destroy the planet does not manifest in “our” reality because we can no tell the difference between it being there and not being there. We function as if it is not there until we are justified that it is there.
I do not argue for “absolute” knowledge but rather justified knowledge because I can not tell the difference between something not being there and not being able to know that it is there.
What does it mean to exist for negative 2 seconds? To be outside of time? I can not wrap my head around that concept.
Time - for me - is just the passage of event a to event b.
With enough data on what it is to be human, we can apply that to the group of humanity and come up with conclusions about objective and subjective morality.
The reference point of objective or subjective is from the subjective reference point of human well-being. Just like nutrition is subjective to pick apples instead of pears. But it is objectively true to not consume poison. Once the reference point of “nutrition” is subjectively selected as a reference point.
Moral dilemma - The run away train and you get to pick path a or b for it to go down. Either path will result in the death of people. Can science solve this? The amount of information you know about the problem determines it’s level of moral issue. Same amount of people killed either way? Is one person the scientist working on the cure for cancer and the group just pedestrians? Is the group all death row inmates and the individual on the other track your mother? What makes this a moral dilemma its its affect on the person at the switch who has to make a choice. The more we can function after the action without it weighing on our psychological well-being appears to be a bar that we set for morality. Not sure if that is always the case, but it works for this example. People are going to die no matter what the switcher chooses to do. They have to make a choice that they can live with. Some may end up just walking away from the situation all together since the results are horrific regardless of what they do, so they’d just assume not be apart of the story. But walking away and not trying anything would not be something that someone else could live with. See it’s the results of the psyche of the person that’s at the switch that is making the choice a moral one or not because they have to be able to live with the consequences of their actions or inactions. Use psychology to determine the level of the person’s mental well-being after the event. That is science. The switcher’s manifestation of their well-being after that event is observable in reality and as such able to be studied in science. There is no absolute morally correct path to take here when you have limited knowledge of your actions and it’s affect on the results. Just being witness to the inevitable terrible result does not make your inactions immoral. Not doing anything about the events that caused that tragedy afterwards is where the immoral action takes place I believe. This is because we have evolved the ability to empathize with our fellow creatures and would want someone to make the world safer for us. So we understand those that have the power and the knowledge to fix bad situations are under a social obligation to protect their tribe members through our evolutionary social development.