I gave an example as you asked. — khaled
Obviously that's what I meant. — khaled
You: These analogies are terrible
Me: I agree, they are extremes intended to show a general principle — khaled
Obviously that's what I meant. I was pointing out that you clearly think they're inadequate but I don't. And that repeating your opinion doesn't get us anywhere. — khaled
They don't, because the situations are too dissimilar, like in all of your attempts throughout this discussion.
— S
You: These analogies are terrible
Me: I agree, they are extremes intended to show a general principle
You: These analogies are terrible — khaled
Some people can't be convinced. — schopenhauer1
If Benatar is right about the psychological studies... — schopenhauer1
It was a question. Is it true that you have the freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers?
You said it was. I said it wasn’t, and gave the examples proving the opposite. You cannot retweet a limerick mocking a trans person without being investigated. You cannot read Dabiq without getting arrested.
No, you do not have the freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. — NOS4A2
If someone claims that circle will become a square in the future, then the statement, "That circle is a circle" is a false statement at that time and that statement cannot be false, therefore that circle cannot become a square. — elucid
Oh you do. — creativesoul
Haha, okay. So how would any ethical stance be incorrect. You simply set a requirement that you then fulfill with your stance. — Terrapin Station
So you don't actually believe that morality/ethics is subjective. — Terrapin Station
So if the requirement to not ban any speech is fulfilled, is that correct? — Terrapin Station
What am I cherry picking? Repeat it again and you’d be wrong again. — NOS4A2
But you weren't- you were equating the situation before birth (the asymmetry) with the situation of suicide or death (no asymmetry). — schopenhauer1
But I bring up that point as it is an important one. The child cannot decide for themselves to be put in a situation where one has to keep playing the game or drastically alter their existential status (suicide). That is a point I am making that is important here. Khaled made an analogy of saying, "Hey I like this game, now I am going to force another person into playing it. That's okay though, that person will probably like it too and if they don't, they can decide to exit by doing one of the scariest and harmful and anguishing things ever, kill themselves.. But don't worry, most people won't chose that, so they will just keep on playing the game." I don't think that is right to do to someone else. — schopenhauer1
I liken antinatalism to a cause like veganism. As long as enough people in society have values so far afield from the particular ethic, it would not be right to impose such a thing. In the field of ideas, it is simple argumentation and convincing that is called for. In fact, even if a majority of people were antinatalist, I don't know if it would be right to "force" people into anything of that magnitude. Of course, now we are getting into politics. — schopenhauer1
What would getting a moral stance correct amount to? — Terrapin Station
It's a category error because there is nothing to get correct or incorrect. — Terrapin Station
It's neither correct nor incorrect to allow or disallow hate speech. Correct/incorrect is a category error here. — Terrapin Station
You're not equivocating moral right/wrong and right/wrong in the sense or correct/incorrect or accurate/in error here, are you? When I say that this is the sort of stuff that we can't get right or wrong I'm saying that we can't say something accurate or in error about it (insofar as moral stances go, where we're not simply reporting what moral stances people happen to have). I'm not saying that we don't have moral dispositions, that we don't think that various things aren't right or wrong. — Terrapin Station
It is not nonexistence tout court, but the asymmetry that occurs prior to existence. — schopenhauer1
You realize you just contradicted yourself. No one CAN decide for themselves prior to birth. — schopenhauer1
Also, no one is "stopping people from conceiving"... — schopenhauer1
Doesn't that mean that a circle can be a square? — elucid
If they can be any stance imaginable, how do we get to any being right or wrong via reason? — Terrapin Station
If I don't think that this is something that it's possible to be right/wrong about, then obviously I don't think that I'm right. — Terrapin Station
I believe the only valid point here against my argument was that we see change everyday. My point for creating the thread is to help people understand those statements, not prove that change is possible or not possible. — elucid
Can't moral emotions be any stance imaginable? — Terrapin Station
Obviously I don't agree that I'm wrong and others are right. I don't believe this is something that it's even possible to be right or wrong about. — Terrapin Station
Why in the world do you think I would defer to others' opinions rather than stating my own? — Terrapin Station
And of course I'm not someone who thinks that different is a bad thing. — Terrapin Station
You clearly did not understand me if you think I am trolling. If something cannot be anything that is not a circle, it is always something that is circle. — elucid
I don't think you really believe that ethical stances are simply ways that individuals feel about interpersonal behavior. You seem to think that there are correct stances via reason. — Terrapin Station
Basically, it is saying that something cannot ever be anything that is not what it is, so it has to with change. — elucid
Hold on a minute, now you're being sensible again. How can you just switch it up like that?
I did not make that comment. — elucid
Are you saying that you agree that a circle is sometimes the same as a square? — elucid