Presumably, you get such a statement from the laws of physics, which allow you deduce things about quantities like force, stress, gravity, etc. I see no evidence that the laws of physics allow you to deduce similar things about morality.
No, because the axioms of physics do not contain the word “bridge.”
(Also, note that TheAncientGeek deliberately included the word “should” in his bridge statement, so you just effectively contradicted yourself by saying that a statement involving “should” can be deduced from physics.)
You seem to have conceded that you can get shoulds out of descriptions. The trick seems to be that if there is something you want to achieve, there are things you should and should not do to achieve it.
If the purpose of morality is, for instance, to achieve cooperative outcomes, and avoid conflict over resources, then there are things people should and shouldn’t do to support that. Although something like game theory , rather than physics, would supply the details
Presumably, you get such a statement from the laws of physics, which allow you deduce things about quantities like force, stress, gravity, etc. I see no evidence that the laws of physics allow you to deduce similar things about morality.
No, because the axioms of physics do not contain the word “bridge.”
(Also, note that TheAncientGeek deliberately included the word “should” in his bridge statement, so you just effectively contradicted yourself by saying that a statement involving “should” can be deduced from physics.)
You seem to have conceded that you can get shoulds out of descriptions. The trick seems to be that if there is something you want to achieve, there are things you should and should not do to achieve it.
If the purpose of morality is, for instance, to achieve cooperative outcomes, and avoid conflict over resources, then there are things people should and shouldn’t do to support that. Although something like game theory , rather than physics, would supply the details
.