The multiple connections between science and ethics
response to Stephen Toulmin
pp. 425-438
Abstract
Stephen Toulmin's attempt to answer the question, "How can we reconnect the sciences with the foundations of ethics?" contains a great many observations with which I entirely agree. His belief that we have recently passed through a period (a generation or two) in which an extreme and historically conditioned effort was made to achieve a complete divorce between science and values is, in my opinion, correct. His observation (and prediction) that this era is now coming to an end, and will not soon be repeated, is supported by current controversies in many scientific fields. Equally helpful is his suggested alternative of a 'series of spectra" to the "value-free" picture of science that has reigned in much of Western Europe and America in past decades.
Publication details
Published in:
Callahan Daniel, Engelhardt Tristram (1981) The roots of ethics: science, religion, and values. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 425-438
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4613-3303-6_19
Full citation:
Graham Loren R. (1981) „The multiple connections between science and ethics: response to Stephen Toulmin“, In: D. Callahan & T. Engelhardt (eds.), The roots of ethics, Dordrecht, Springer, 425–438.