180 Proof
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I am not trying to do ethics.
— Mark S
If so, then how do you know that your "science of morality" can help anyone actually do ethics? — 180 Proof
If you suspect the hypothesis is false, any candidate counterexamples would be welcome.
— Mark S
I have no alternative hypothesis. — Fooloso4
Okay.I don't know if the science of descriptively moral behaviors (the Science of Morality) will help with ethics. — Mark S
You have not providedI fear that ethicists will not recognize its usefulness.
Surely you can think of a few cultural moral norms that seem unlikely to be parts of cooperation strategies. — Mark S
I don't know if the science of descriptively moral behaviors (the Science of Morality) will help with ethics. I fear that ethicists will not recognize its usefulness.
— Mark S
Okay.
You have not provided sufficient grounds for (or any persuasive examples of) "its usefulness" to ethics. — 180 Proof
Your posing this reinforces the view that you haven't understood the misfire in your approach.A question for you. Which discipline's methods do you think are better suited for studying descriptively moral behaviors (behaviors motivated by our moral sense and advocated by past and present cultural moral norms)? I think science's methods (such as inference to best explanation) are critical. Which, if any, of moral philosophy's methods do you think would be suitable? — Mark S
I am not trying to do ethics. I am trying to 1) show how the science of descriptively moral behaviors can be useful in ethical investigations into what we ought to do, and 2), in that absence of conclusively argued-for imperative oughts, that science is an excellent source of moral guidance. — Mark S
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