No I don’t believe I can consciously control all the processes of my body, but I do control them in the sense that all “automatic responses” are governed and regulated by me, my biology. — NOS4A2
What is any evidence at all of a correlation between anyone saying "Gas the Jews" and an increase in violence? — Terrapin Station
And your evidence for your perfectly rational and not at all fundamental belief that our beliefs are generated somehow without causal antecedents from our environment is...? For the fifth time now. — Isaac
I think I get it. Like the month October, “personality” is an abstract noun. So not only are you a body, but more, you are an abstract noun, or at least fit the definition of the abstract noun “personality”. — NOS4A2
Maybe that's the status quo in Australia, where people seem to be much more amenable to censorship, speech control, etc. In the U.S., the status quo is to think that it's ridiculous that people suggest that video games, films, etc. cause violence, and it's the fringe moral majority-type wackos who want to ban stuff. — Terrapin Station
You said you were more than your body, and as an example you said your personality. I just want to know where this personality exists in space and time, where it begins and ends, what it is and what it looks like. I suspect these are questions you will not answer. — NOS4A2
Yikes. Okay, at least that's consistent. Ridiculous, but consistent. — Terrapin Station
If it is not your body, and not itself a body, where is this personality? It sounds like there is some reification going on here, giving solidity to pure wind. — NOS4A2
In philosophy we use "proof" in the stricter sense standardly. This is supposed to be a philosophy board. — Terrapin Station
Anyway, if you think that hate speech is sometimes a causal factor for violence, and it should be regulated because of that, why don't you think that video games, movies, etc. are sometimes are causal factor for violence that should be regulated because of that? — Terrapin Station
C'mon, man--just how many Aspies are on this board anyway. — Terrapin Station
"Hate speech causes violence" isn't saying anything different. No one would think that we're saying that it always causes violence or that it's the only cause or anything like that. — Terrapin Station
Sure, you’re not saying it and do not mean it, but no less you want to go the the cinema, you are your body, therefor your body wants to go to the cinema. — NOS4A2
Anything else presupposes a sort of dualism, a homunculus, a Cartesian theater. — NOS4A2
What is the qualified version? — Terrapin Station
I am my body, I can prove this by pointing to myself. — NOS4A2
You cannot point to yourself, or whatever it is you identity yourself as. — NOS4A2
Why are you comfortable making a blanket statement like "Hate speech causes violence?" — Terrapin Station
Thats a pretty pertinent question, you seriously going to dodge it like that? — DingoJones
I am my body. — NOS4A2
Same question for you, by the way--do you also think that video games, movies, etc. cause violence? — Terrapin Station
Nothing plausible about it in my view if we don't have empirical evidence to support it.
So that's why I care. I guess I'm more skeptical than you. — Terrapin Station
Simply because they are my responses and no one else’s. — NOS4A2
Letting posts on this board sway you on something is a scary idea. — Terrapin Station
I didn't say that it's impossible for speech to be a cause of violent action. I said that we can't show that it is. — Terrapin Station
You're a determinist. I'm not. Obviously I don't believe that free will is "wishful thinking" I think that determinism is thinking that hasn't moved past about 1840. — Terrapin Station
Free will can't be part of the equation if we're trying to claim that something prior to it caused something. That's contradictory. Free will isn't deterministic. — Terrapin Station
I don’t think that’s what he’s doing, I think it’s more that he thinks that as long as the information processing and deciding happened within one’s own body that it’s his responsibility, automatic or not. — khaled
It's similar to something like learning how to drive. At first, you need to consciously think about everything you're doing, and you need to figure out how to do it. After you've done it a bit, though, you no longer need to think about it to do it. That doesn't imply that it's not something you're doing. — Terrapin Station
I suppose the issue I have is the so-called effect of the words, when clearly the effect—hearing, constructing meaning, decoding sounds—has only me as it’s cause. Once the sound or word enters my domain, so to speak, it is under the control of my processes whether automatic or not. — NOS4A2
The media is spinning the yarn that Trump is racist, not Trump himself. It is the media spinning the yarn that Trump is racist, not Trump. — NOS4A2
What racist rhetoric? — NOS4A2
Yet particular members of the human species have been engaged in what has been conventionally established as the doing of science from at least the early 1600’s. So either the human species hasn’t really been doing science at all, or your argument is junk because it’s conclusion is catastrophically false.
......Eenie meanie minee moe...... — Mww
Suppose someone tells you your house is on fire. Let's call that evidence (A). Now you have to update your belief in the hypothesis "my house isn't on fire". How can you do that if you can't even choose whether to believe the person is reliable or not? Is lying or not? Is in a position to know about your house or not? Those are all choices you have to make before you can even begin to assess (A)'s impact on the hypothesis. — RogueAI
1. The ability to make choices is a necessary condition for the evaluation of evidence. — RogueAI
How can you evaluate evidence if you can't freely determine whether it's good evidence or not? — RogueAI
If you're simply compelled into believing a particular piece of evidence supports a hypothesis, you don't know if it actually does support the hypothesis. You just have to hope that what you were compelled to believe is right, but how would you ever know? — RogueAI
That is a very broad sense of individual. I see an individual as something that operates entirely independently. Something like a car part. True, independently these things do exist, but without the car they functionally have far less value and have very little justification for their existence. This is why I see the individual human as something akin to a car part, yes, an individual car part, but the car is what is providing value here, the car is what legitimizes the existence of the car part. Without the car, that individual part is not comparable to functional car part, the carburetor that functions inside of a car provides far more value to the owner and to society than the carburetor that sits in the junkyard.
As the car part cannot be divided from the car and retain the same degree of functionality and value, it cannot provide this value without the existence of a car to exist within, that is why I argue that the person, so inherently co-dependent upon the society it exists within, cannot be respected as an individual. The society is what gives the person such a high degree of value, as without this society the value of a modern person plummets significantly. Without the car, the car-part is just scrap metal, but within the car, the part is able to provide legitimizing and competitive value that justifies its existence.
In a world where the independent individual has become functionally irrelevant in the face of society, this is why I argue that no human can be an individual, because existing within this car, providing value to the society, has become a definitive trait of the modern human. — Marzipanmaddox
It's fair that you don't accept the definition, but I lack a better word for this concept. Morality has always been the fabric of individuals banding together and cooperate. Morality is easily the only thing that produces this result, and this is why I equate morality to this process, and this is why I equate anything that accomplishes this to morality. — Marzipanmaddox
Pick one and we can talk about it. — NOS4A2