A
aileron
Guest
Sure, I’ll try to elaborate. As an example, philosophers came up with thought experiments to explore if a moral action depends only on outcome. Scientists picked up on some of these thought experiments, mainly the Trolley Problem and attempted to apply scientific methods to answer whether people have any innate, more or less universal moral principles.However, given your definition there are still areas where science can play a role. For instance, if in the formulation of morality as you describe, there arise questions that seem to fall into the purview of science, in these situations scientists should play a role.
Could you elaborate here?
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Scientists took the Trolley Problem and collected surveys from all over the world. They even put the problem into terms appropriate for remote peoples of the Amazon and surveyed people there to help rule out cultural syncratism as an explanation. They sliced and diced the statistics all ways. They now have some evidence, with at least some scientific rigor, that people really are hardwired to make certain moral choices no matter what culture, religious or atheist, rich or poor, liberal or conservative, etc. If their results are correct, and they seem to be, then there is more to moral choices than outcomes and also people have at least some rules for morality built into their brains somehow.
The Trolley Problem, and surveys based on thought experiments similar to it, give a yes or no choice to situations that will lead to the death of five innocent people or only one innocent person. If outcome were all that mattered in moral decisions, people would consistently choose the option that saved five lives, but in many setups of the thought experiment people choose the option that leads to the deaths of five people. If these moral choices were not the product of an innate sense of morality, we would expect to find differences across cultures, religions, etc., but they are consistent worldwide.
(You can search “Trolley Problem” and read the specific setups of the surveys.)
So using your definition of morality, science can do more than just sit passively until other formulators of morality ask scientific questions. They can provide (name removed by moderator)ut to the formulation too. In the case of the Trolley Problem, people could use the findings to support moral arguments that outcome should not be the only determining factor.