English, asked by harshnemagang, 12 days ago

Although scientific skill is necessary, it is by no means sufficient. A dictatorship
of men of science would very soon become horrible. Skill without wisdom may
prove destructive. For this reason, if for no other, it is great importance that those
who receive a scientific education should not be merely scientific, but should have
some understanding of that kind of wisdom which, if it can be imparted at all, can
only be imparted by cultural side of education. Science enables us to know the
means to any chosen end, but it does not help us to decide upon what ends should
be pursued. If you wish to exterminate the human race, it will show you how to do
it. If you wish to secure adequate prosperity for the whole human race, science
will tell you what you must do. But it will not tell you whether one of these ends is
more desirable than another.

Answers

Answered by bipulpandit2006
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Monotonicity extends to a fairness criterion for social welfare methods as follows: a social welfare method satisfies Monotonicity if whenever a given preference table produces a social welfare with A ranked above B, then A remains ranked above B even if voters who have B ranked above A reverse their rankings for these candidates. Decide whether the social welfare methods defined by the Plurality, Borda Count, Hare, and Coombs Methods satisfy or violate the Monotonicity Criterion for social welfare methods. Prove your answer.​

Hold on, our servers areAlthough scientific skill is necessary, it is by no means sufficient. A dictatorship

of men of science would very soon become horrible. Skill without wisdom may

prove destructive. For this reason, if for no other, it is great importance that those

who receive a scientific education should not be merely scientific, but should have

some understanding of that kind of wisdom which, if it can be imparted at all, can

only be imparted by cultural side of education. Science enables us to know the

means to any chosen end, but it does not help us to decide upon what ends should

be pursued. If you wish to exterminate the human race, it will show you how to do

it. If you wish to secure adequate prosperity for the whole human race, science

will tell you what you must do. But it will not tell you whether one of these ends is

more desirable than another.

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