So you think it's decreasing crime over simply just having whatever offense be a crime without being a "hate crime"? — Terrapin Station
I’m not the one pretending words can “change the world”, which is the premise of sorcery. — NOS4A2
What do you see as the value of having a category of "hate crimes"? — Terrapin Station
Nope. Don't do that, either.
I'm my own arbiter, regardless of whether it goes along with the crowd or not. — Terrapin Station
If the mere act of asserting the claim justifies it, I’ll just assert the opposite. Those books and speeches metaphorically changed the world. — NOS4A2
Well, I don't go along with the crowd just to go along with the crowd, at least. — Terrapin Station
I'd never consider a video like that to count as evidence of motivation, but at any rate, I'd not classify anything as a "hate crime" in the first place. — Terrapin Station
You can’t make something true by sheer force of repetition. — NOS4A2
I think Trump is one of the most liberal presidents in a long time. — NOS4A2
Sorry, was referring to this: "the police investigation found hate speech in video form on his computer, which was used as evidence against him."
What would that be evidence of? — Terrapin Station
What is the video supposed to be evidence of, exactly? — Terrapin Station
Now it’s on you to explain how one combination of words can move someone differently than another combination of words. But that’s to argue for sorcery, which I believe is impossible. — NOS4A2
I’m talking of real effects, as in cause and effect, not the specious “effects” you have in mind. Yes, light and sound have certain effects on the body. In that sense the effects are the same. — NOS4A2
I’m with you on that. Anarchism is the best option. But I fear a moral and ethical populace is required for it to work. — NOS4A2
Yes, but Anarchists clearly do not call for that there should be no central government in the sense that there should be warring factions of various political extremists. — thewonder
But the speech had the same effect on the listener as any other sound. — NOS4A2
Any and all actions following hate speech, whether violent, hateful, or otherwise, begins with the listener, not the speaker. This is true of any reaction to speech. — NOS4A2
This is the sort of word politics and policing we’re dealing with here. No injustice, no tyranny, no authoritarianism, just crimes of speech and political correctness. — NOS4A2
I'm not discounting that there was no government in Somalia. I'm stating that there are not a significant number of Anarchists in Somalia to consider the crisis there to be chalked up to an Anarchist aporia. Almost no one tried to implement an Anarchist project in Somalia. The crisis in Somalia is, in all liklihood, resultant of the failures of what could be considered to be Neo-Liberal Capital. It's not a crisis spawned by a delusional belief in "anarchy". — thewonder
I don't think that Somalia has ever significantly attempted to engage in an Anarchist project. I think that you're equating "anarchism" as a pejorative with Anarchism itself. I haven't quite parcelled out enough of what I think that Anarchist society should be like to really explain that it's not like it would just be mayhem, but Anarchism really doesn't just advance mayhem. That's just the common cultural depiction of Anarchists. — thewonder
Sure, so I'm asking your opinion. You don't believe that you chose to buy the books? Or are you agnostic on this issue? — Terrapin Station
You didn't choose to purchase the books? — Terrapin Station
Why are you introducing "appear"? Either it's an ontological fact that they had a choice or it is not. — Terrapin Station
For the 100th time, influences are not causes. — Terrapin Station
If they had a choice, then the speech wasn't the cause. Their decision was. — Terrapin Station
Do you see smoking as causal in lung cancer? — Coben
So, terrapin's trivial misunderstanding is that if something is not a sufficient cause, it's not a cause at all.
— Baden
That pretty much nails it.
Despite...
"Causality (also referred to as causation,[1] or cause and effect) is efficacy, by which one process or state, a cause, contributes to the production of another process or state, an effect,[2] where the cause is partly responsible for the effect, and the effect is partly dependent on the cause. In general, a process has many causes,[3] which are also said to be causal factors for it, and all lie in its past."
From Terrapin's favourite source of authority Wikipedia, on Causality. — Isaac
Answer me, why is it needed in the first place? But you cannot. — schopenhauer1
Again, the assumption is what is it about the dealing with that we crave? — schopenhauer1
If you enable systemic censorship of one ideology on a preventive basis, you can always make the case to include others on similar grounds, gradually expanding the criteria of what gets censored depending on the agendas the authorities want you to follow. — Necrofantasia
I am an Anarchist. I interpret Anarchism as advancing some form of maximal liberty and equality. — thewonder
“I dont know” leaves the answer to whatever question completely open, saying you don’t know means the answer could be anything. A person could start eliminating certain possibilities after that of course to determine what isnt the answer but the possibilities of what IS the answer is inherently open by nature of not knowing. — DingoJones
The only reason I repeat things is because you fail to acknowledge my point. — Marzipanmaddox
You fail to understand my point, so I attempt to explain it again. — Marzipanmaddox
As for my points not qualifying as philosophy, this is debatable. My points are about an opinionated interpretation of morality, which is so opinionated that you go so far as to call it biased. This is by definition philosophy, regardless of the fact that I defend my argument using empirical and objective reasoning. Surely, within philosophy, empirical reasoning is equally as valid in philosophy as subjective, empathetic, or ethereal reasoning. — Marzipanmaddox
The standard for philosophy is so low that it is nearly impossible for an argument about any related subject to fail to qualify as philosophy. The standard of philosophy is basically "What do you think about X?", and these are my thoughts, with relation to X. X in this case being morality. — Marzipanmaddox
Janus is pretty much correct on this topic. — Marzipanmaddox
Justify your point, defend your stance, rebut his argument with more than a simple attack on his character. — Marzipanmaddox
You can't seem to follow my argument, that is why you are bored. — Marzipanmaddox
You are essentially the one who is arguing that the turtle is a bag of rocks here, you are the one using the inapplicable definition as evidence to justify your argument. — Marzipanmaddox
It is beyond human nature. It is the nature of life, it is the entire purpose of being alive, the sole definition of life itself is to flourish competitively.
— Marzipanmaddox
I agree with you that it goes beyond human nature, but I would say that the definition of life is to flourish cooperatively, not competitively. That's the basis of ecology. If a predator over-consumes resources, they may appear to flourish for a short while, but they will quickly die out when resources are over-utilized. So that would not be real flourishing at all. Same goes for the plutocrats. — Janus