Can anyone justifiably claim to be a moral authority?
Conversation
Replying to
Yeah, I'd say so. But that's predicated on ethical and moral work, not on developing theorems for (generally) the military or corporations.
1
Replying to
TBH, I'm going to be reflexively cautious about anyone who claims authority, rather than providing cogent moral ideas.
2
1
Replying to
I don't listen to everything a doctor says just because they are a medical authority, either... need reasons.
Same for any other field.
1
Replying to
Yeah, I think that's the proven with NdGT etc - there's at least an implied "because science" tagged on what he says.
2
Replying to
I wouldn't waltz into a lab or emergency room to tell them what to do, but when the cigarette-smoking doctor tells me to eat this or that...
1
1
Replying to
To be fair, in that case they are sticking to their field and the parameters are fairly clearly set. Most people probably benefit.
2
Replying to
Do they? We have a huge mental health epidemic b/c doctors get paid by big pharma to push psychiatric drugs for every problem...
1
1
Replying to
I think the majority work with the tools they have, often get it wrong but usually help people.
3
I'm sure there's corruption in some places and maybe I'm just super lucky to have the NHS, but I think doctors help on average.
4
Replying to
Even then, if the competent doctor makes a proclamation that seems very strange, we'd be likely to seek a second opinion. Error is the norm.
Replying to
Sure and managing your own health is sensible, but some people will be using their own ideas to avoid vaccines, use homeopathy, etc (..?)
1
Replying to
I am not saying "don't listen to doctors", I'm saying "use your own reasoning skills". If they don't have em'... no help for them anywhere.
1
Show replies

