R
Russell_SA
Guest
To me, it seems you are suggesting that we can not observe someone crying in anguish over the actions that someone or something took place in their world. That is what I was describing. That is my reference point for how we can tell if something was a moral action or not. Where is my logic wrong there? Or did I miss read that? That’s how I understood your comment here.I stated that you can test for emotional responses, chemical responses and all kinds of things. These are subject to science.
But you’re taking it as given that harm to a person is bad and that the well being of a person is good. You cannot test for that. That is prior to any scientific investigation. It’s a claim that can’t be subjected to empirical testing. It is a truth determined by reason, not empiricism.
Are you describing personhood as personality here? If so, personality is an emergent property of a mind, just like wettness is an emergent property of water. Its a descriptive term of conditions that are displayed by a being. The personality is what describes those displays the individual is illustrating about itself. The resultant description and conclusion based on observed data. Or did I go down the wrong path here? If not, where is my logical conclusion and process wrong here?Other claims, such as personhood, are similar. You can’t use empirical science to tell you what personhood is. You arrive at a definition through reason, and then can make use of empirical science to test for the parts of that definition.
I don’t understand how my approach to ethics has been wrong. The path you described may well work for you but why would my approach not work either? To first see that “fire - hot - bad” and then work out an ethical way not to burn myself or others again. You reason first then apply the practices to the world. I look at the world first and then reason from that. I like my way because I wait to see what the condition of the human experience is before making decisions about it. It helps to remove my inherent bias and ignorance. I know that I may reason to my own benefit at the detriment of others. So I’m looking for a way to remove that as a possible (name removed by moderator)ut to the solution.My point is that the foundation of ethics is not empirical. There are claims about what is good and what is bad. There are claims about definitions. Once you have that foundation, empirical science can be employed to test for the criteria you’ve determined are necessary, but you can’t employ empirical science prior to that point.
I completely agree that if I was in a situation where I can’t tell the difference between the two, then how could I pick between them. That is why I started out this process by stating that I do not go into absolute knowledge. I can only reason with what I can tell the difference between the two ideas. If I can not tell the difference between A and B, then I am not justified in treating A and B any differently. That is why for me existence is inherent on our ability to detect it in reality in some way, otherwise it’s just an idea in someone’s mind. There could be an asteroid coming to destroy the planet, but its not part of our reality until we can justify that it is even there in the first place. It is not useless to verify, to our understanding, that something happened or not. That is the grounding foundation of how we make justifiable conclusions. The people that did not believe that their observation of traffic and walking in front of cars only got to try that experiment the one time and were taken out of the gene pool. We’re the product of people that trust their senses regardless if the (name removed by moderator)uts are actually true or not.I mean, we could go deeper. You can’t use science to prove that there’s any real causal relationship between the outside world and your experience or if a demon is implanting these experiences in your head. Any empirical science you conduct, all that data, all those observations, could be planted by the demon, so are useless in verifying themselves. But that’s really a whole separate issue. Even assuming the real world is intelligible, you can’t use empirical science to test all claims to it, including claims on good and bad or any such value judgments.