Unbeliever
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Very interesting, "many roads" theory.
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I am sorry, but from what I can figure out from this video, the speaker does not has the appropriate understanding and proper concept of life...
Impossible because you cannot detach science from its materialistic approach and that approach is devastating to the very notion of morality.
The title of the video is "Science can answer moral questions". The "not so smart-guy" who gave that title is so confiscated by sophisticated science that he thinks you need science to answer such trivial stuffs as morality?
Think of this question - "I am a rich and powerful bastard and I have everything to live the way I want to live. What reason is there for me to be a good person following moral values at the cost of my whims and desires - whatever they may be?"
Maybe your understanding of science can't, but you are, just like in the other thread, confusing the scientific method with the natural sciences. Political Science, Sociology, Psychology are just a few examples of non-materialistic sciences at least in the narrow-sense that you define 'materialism'.
Maybe you disagree with his concepts but he definitely has the understanding.. He is a PHD in Neuroscience and also has a degree in philosophy. Furthermore he studied Budhism and meditation. So maybe you just didn't get it what he was actually claiming, which is quiet modest and even self-evident to a certain degree if you think about it..
What do you mean by "he is not wrong in his own place"?
What he is talking about are facts, that can be known about human happiness, that is: universal facts. He is not wrong that these things can be known "anywhere". He is not talking about very detailed value judgments(which have one or several definite answer, hence the food analogy), but he explains very clearly that although there are "many roads" to happiness does not make it a vacuous concept and we know quiet a large number of things that are OBJECTIVELY either detrimental or beneficial to human well-being.
You won't disagree that there CAN be objective things known about human happiness (just like the examples he gives), will you? That would be pretty idiotic.
Now you disappoint me. How did you get that ridiculous idea? Think about it! Morality is anything but trivial. Look at human history, look at human behavior right now. There are thousands upon thousands of examples of immoral behavior that has been considered
moral at the time, has been institutionalized and kept going by entire cultures.
What constitutes a moral act has been changing and shifting since humans exist and has been and still is a matter of debate, tradition, upbringing and opinion. I mean, not even all countries could agree on the convention of human rights! And to change this relativistic approach and fill it with facts is exactly what science is for, just like in all other fields of interest.
You are jumping between individual morality, which is intrinsic for basic things (no murder, rape, theft) and collective ethical or moral behaviors and standards. It is about questioning traditions that are kept for their own sake.
The reason "to be a good person" doesn't need science, what this is about is "what is a good person?" "What kind of behavior increases human happiness or well-being?
Questions that are relevant to this speech would be something like:
"Is it a good idea for a society to hang its homosexuals?, to stone its adulterers?" "Is it a good idea to force children to wear burkas?(directly or indirectly through group pressure) or to subject them to physical harm and humiliation to build their character and benefit their development?
I hope you get what I'm saying since you have it pretty confused right now