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chub500 | 5 years ago

Unfortunately the biggest questions surrounding public policy inevitably fall into realms science can't answer for us.

How far do we go to resuscitate these victims of tragedy? How far do we go as a society to punish wrongdoing? When does institutionalization become dehumanizing? For that matter - what is a disorder versus simply a difference in human beings?

As a doctor, this author should know these are questions her field cannot answer and this overt humanism is just so arrogant.

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pdonis|5 years ago

> As a doctor, this author should know these are questions her field cannot answer

While this is true, it's also true that this doctor made actual practical suggestions, like pushing for stoves with smoke sensors and automatic shut-off valves. She's not trying to argue that science has all the answers. She's just pointing out that there are many cases in which science does have answers, and when it does, we should use them.

TimTheTinker|5 years ago

She does that, but she goes further:

> reason and compassion over superstition and tradition

The problem is, both reason and compassion (at least as the author wishes to use them) ultimately rest on ethical and moral systems that science itself is incapable of addressing, hence falling into the “superstition and tradition” bucket she derides.

In other words, objective moral values and duties, if they exist, must have a philosophical basis to be real, and that basis is inaccessible to science and reason alone. It requires a worldview that answers basic questions like origin, meaning, morality, and destiny.

It seems she wishes to cut off the legs on which she would seek to stand.

eyelidlessness|5 years ago

> For that matter - what is a disorder versus simply a difference in human beings?

What difference between humans isn’t disorder for others?