Bertrand Russell Quotes 366 |
The data of science are individual percepts, and these are far more subjective than common sense supposes ; nevertheless, upon this basis the imposing edifice of impersonal science has been built up. This depends upon the fact that there are certain respects in which the percepts of the majority agree, and that the divergent percepts of the colour-blind and the victims of hallucinations can be ignored. It may be that there is some similar way of arriving at objectivity in ethics; if so, since it must involve appeal to the majority, it will take us from personal ethics into the sphere of politics, ...
Source: Bertrand Russell: Human Society in Ethics and Politics, (1954), chapter 1
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