Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Doctrix Periwinkle's avatar

May I say as a scientist that leaning on "science" as the basis for moral judgements is absolutely bonkers, and points to the quasi-religious worship of expertise that's currently popular in the West.

The whole point of science is that its conclusions are tentative and subject to revision, while the whole point of a moral judgment is that it's actually true. The whole point of science is that it's giving us a mechanistic model for how things work, not what we should do with that information.

I could study the mechanism of a poison to make an antidote for people who are poisoned, or because I want to more effectively poison people. Science will give me information that would serve either end. It will absolutely not tell me toward what end my poison discovery should be directed.

I would be interested to know how many scientists think that science is the basis for moral judgement.

Mike T's avatar

As always, another interesting study. This one quote really caught my attention: "For a sizable share of other Christians, faith does not play a central role in how they make moral decisions."

Seems like a reflection of a personal subjective vs objective theological paradigm being acted out.

17 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?