Some people really like loud repetitive noises late at night, so what is it that makes playing the drums for sixteen hours a day something that its reasonable to legislate against?
— Isaac
Well, I'm a free musical instrument playing absolutist, so I don't believe that there should be any laws restricting the freedom to play drums really loudly all night, every night, when your neighbours are trying to sleep. — S
Right, so I would want people to work on dealing with the specific cases, just as we do in contract law and even with physical violence. What kind of contact was it? Was it intentional? How were the bodies moving? What signals were given? Often the impacts can't be measured in physical violence and the context is extremely important and the communication. It can lead to very complicated court procedures, though over trivial stuff (unless it was, say, a police officer or a rich person on the receiving end) it gets dropped. Contracts, which you accepted before, can often have incredibly complicated interpretive differences involved, even if the contract were made with anal precision. Like whose name should get on a screenplay, jeez, that can be complicated. Or how an employee carried out tasks or didn't and to what degree and in what circumstances and in relation to what actions and inactions of coworkers and bosses. Again, jeez, anyone's position might seem arbritrary, but humans can develop methods to try to work this out. Obviously far from perfectly.Okay, whereas I wouldn't hinge anything merely on whether someone is "having an unpleasant experience" because arbitrary people can have an unpleasant experience — Terrapin Station
For example, someone could completely flip out because someone is wearing a plaid shirt, whether the plaid shirt-wearer knows the person will flip out or not. That shouldn't be a problem with the plaid shirt-wearer. The person flipping out needs to get help. — Terrapin Station
And look at that, you are capable of deciding what is 'too sensitive'. You could take part in the process. You seem to have a way to measure sensitivity. That's great. That means there is some equivalent to decibels.In my society people have a responsibility to not be too sensitive, — Terrapin Station
Sure, and I wouldn't want any physical contact to be considered assault (or is it battery) and it seems there are ways to determine the difference, though obviously there is a subjective element there. Likewise with contracts. I wouldn't want to get arrested for assault if I brushed past someone on the subway either.I'm not going to base laws on people being neurotic, not being able to handle simple things, etc.--because we can find people who'll flip out over any arbitrary thing, and then nothing is legal because of that and we've got a big mess where people only have to claim to be bothered by something in order to be able to control others over any and every little thing they don't like. — Terrapin Station
Well, I wouldn't like that either. I am also shooting for a way to deter, for example, threats that most humans would find disturbing enough to cause them problems. I would prefer that that is not treated the same as other kinds of free speech use. And, yes, it might be very tricky to work out individual cases. So be it.That's completely the opposite direction of what I'm shooting for. — Terrapin Station
t tMy slap might or might not pass that test, thought I have to say it seems rather arbritrary. I could probably use a little shiatsu like pressure that leaves no damage or scars and gives someone agony for 15 minutes. That should be a crime unless there was some serious justification for that. Like every time you tried to let them up they went for the gun they had recently pointed at you.This is also why I don't base any ethical stances or laws merely on "harm" or "suffering" or anything like that, and it's why I have minimum requirements even for nonconsensual violence. No one is being arrested, fined, etc. for intentionally poking you in the arm or something like that. It has to be something with macro-observable effects days later--that's a requirement for a minimum intensity, otherwise the "victim" needs to just chill out and not overreact. — Terrapin Station
Couldn't we say that a computer, with security camera feed, does this, perhaps, shuttling anomolous movements, recorded ones that is, to special files and throwing out the rest or storing them elsewhere?I know what I think subjective experience means, and I've said as much many times. For me it means something like the logging to memory of sensory inputs. I've been told that doesn't cover it. — Isaac
I think the issue is partly coming down to a damning of the limbic system or emotions. IOW if it is possible to change the way you relate to emotions and this is a factor in the disturbing stimuli, then you with the emotional reaction should have no legal recourse. It is your problem.As Coben has already indicated, there is ample relationship between anxiety from verbal bullying and loss of sleep, but you'd say they chose to react that way but needn't. Why the different approach to annoying noises? — Isaac
Sensory and verbal stimuli and physical contact stimuli have different effects on different people. The receivers personalities and measures taken affect what they experience. I wouldn't protect one category of stimuli and not others. Or better put, I would include verbal stimuli. I prefer to have a society where intentionally created unpleasant experience can be responded to with moderate violence. You cause unpleasance, you experience unpleasance. And we look at individual cases and decide as a group. Whether tribe or jury process or DAs. No jury would convict me for slapping someone who said they were going to rape my child. It wouldn't get to the DAs desk.But what does that have to do with the fact that I'd legislate persistent sensory stimuli of a certain intensity etc.? — Terrapin Station
It does for the guitar player. We got people in these scenarios.It doesn't have anything to do with expression.
No, I am arguing that threats of violence are such an effective stimuli that they need only be delivered once to have endocrine reactions in large numbers of humans since they are social mammals with active limbic systems. Not all, but many. I gave a specific example, but there would be a category of threats.I obviously wouldn't make legislation based on any arbitrary thing bothering any arbitrary individual. That's what you seem to be arguing for. — Terrapin Station
Sure, but it seems like when free speech comes up and the strong advocates advocate for it they think in terms of legislation. Let's not have any legislation limiting free speech. I rarely hear much attack on the private sector for its inhibition of free speech - of course this is a vast thread and there are many threads out there and I may miss them, but it seems like the private limitation is not really noticed. And it is endemic.Yes of course, censorship exists. If the boss believed in free speech, on the other hand, she might not be fired. — NOS4A2
So, what does my wife do in the meantime? Would it be wrong for her to censor or punish him, given that she lives in a capitalist country?But note that I'd not have a capitalist system in the first place. I'd have a socialist system, which also wouldn't be based on money in any traditional sense. In my system, if someone is uncomfortable with someone they're working with, it's no problem to simply work somewhere else instead, with people who you like better. — Terrapin Station
Why should non-verbal expression be limited, but verbal expression be allowed if one can see increases in negative symptoms in the experiencers of both? Higher cortisol levels, lost sleep, whatever. If the symptoms are very similar why is one protected absolutely but the other has a limit? And why can't we expect people to buy soundproofing, and other measures to take care of their own sensitivity.I'd have "sensory ordinances" similar to what we have now re sounds, smells, flashing lights, etc. — Terrapin Station
And here we see a process unfolding over some period of time.How long can an arbitrary stream of language expressions continue before it contradicts itself? In my experience, not very long. That is why I will not easily say, "I do not believe you". My knee-jerk reaction is rather: "Please, go on."
So, no, it is not suspension of belief. I will certainly be in doubt, but not in disbelief. Doubt is rather some kind of indecisiveness. Doubt and disbelief are quite different from each other.
People get pissed off if you disbelieve them for no good reason at all, and they are actually right, because there is not even a need for that. — alcontali
Well, it is fundamentally anti-investigatory and hasty. Now or never, and it takes oneself out of the equation also. I encounter idea X. Person who has idea X does not present me with evidence. I dismiss. (or 'can' as people keep pointing out as if the real life use of the razor was via this modal verb). I encounter. I demand evidence or note the lack. I dismiss. I do not interact. I do not probe. I do not see where it might lead me. I do not see if I have any evidence or a frame in which it might add something. I do not black box. I do not tease out. I close a door.Hitchen's razor, however, would obviously not work. The police would get absolutely nowhere with their investigations, if they used it. — alcontali
Which wouldn't be problems then. One can't really complain about people who try to limit free speech if one thinks speech cannot have negative effects on people, even other people.
But by limiting speech (through coercion, no less) they limit speaking, reading, conversation, which are actions which have meaningful and important effects. — NOS4A2
That's you. Others treat speech as having only the effects of gibberish. Presumably of a similar volume and pitch. IOW speaking to someone does not cause any other effects than speaking gibberish. I really had that discussion - a rather interesting one - for a series of posts. Might not have been the guy I just responded to, but it wasn't you, in any case.It's not that speech can't have an effect on others. It's that it can't be shown to force them to perform particular actions. — Terrapin Station
for themselves, I assume you mean. Sure. But T Clark doesn't know what Khaled needs for justification. Khaled asked him for the source of the theories. That presumably is within the abilities of T Clark. It is not, as T Clark made it seem, like being asked to walk him through the research. It is asking for someone to specify. IOW then Khaled would have a similar amount of justification as T Clark. Right now, he has been presented with an abstract non-specific 'theories'. He has less justification that TC, or let's say, he has less view of what justification led to T Clark drawing a conclusion.Again, justify is a subjective state. The fact that one person (requiring more information) is redirected by another only demonstrates that that second person does not have information sufficient for the first. It does not tell us anything about whether they have information sufficient for them. — Isaac
He couldn't know that yet. So his, yes, honest self-evaluation, seemed to me a general one. I cannot satisfy interlocuters. And even telling you which theories I read would not do it, so find someone else. I am taking his demurral in this context. He doesn't even get Khaled up to speed on which theorists he means. Perhaps he forgot them.Yes, because the science is indeed out there, and the estimation included was that he could not justify it to Khaled's satisfaction — Isaac
I never even considered that. I did think that it was possible that whatever theories he had read might not actually cover the issue the way he presented it. And that whatever research he read did not actually have as its conclusions what he was saying. That would be my interest in relation to Khaled's request for which theories. Is it a mere impression that that's what they meant? Did they come out and say it in the conclusions of their peer reviewed paper? Who are these people? What kinds of documents were they? There are models out there which carry the presumptions of many scientists but even by the scientists themselves may not be considered the justified conclusions of repeated testing.Your not "taking" their conclusion, and your claiming their conclusion is not justified are two different things. You may not belive T Clark when he says he has read such conclusions. That is a matter of trust, not logic. In a situation like this, I can't think of any reason why he might lie — Isaac
Sure, but often people conflate for example memory and consciousness. So if someone does not remember it is assumed that this means they were not conscious. I have seen this in discussions led by scientists and by lay people and by philosophers (overlapping groups). Philosophers can have a role in sorting these things out. Philosophers can also look at what the research actually shows and what is being concluded because it fits with current models. Philosophers could also look at paradigmatic bias. As I said somewhere in here scientists did not consider animals conscious or subjects. They were considered automatons, or perhaps better put, it was considered the best default position to consider them like this and professionally dangerous to do otherwise certainly upinto the 60s. I think that was a philosophically poor default choice. And I am not just hindsight backseat driving. I was alive then and challenged the idea then. There has always been a bias to consider things like us to have consciousness. Right now plants are moving into a grey area against default resistence. This is based on philosophical ideas that are not clearly to my mind justified. One common one is that complexity is necessary for consciousness. I have all the sympathy in the world for why this seems like a good default, but I don't think its justified. All sorts of cognitive abilities absolutely are dependent on complexity. I have no doubt about that. The question is whether consciousness is in the same category as those cognitive abilities. And since we know that many extremely sophisticated cognitive abilities can be handled without consciousness I think it would be best not to assume they are the same or have the same cause or are facets of the same 'things' or processes. I am sure there are other roles philosophers can have, or really intelligent non-scientists cna have.. And I would point out that your description makes assumptions. Like that consciousness is best sesedescribed as an effect rather than a facet, say.If we want to know why consciousness arose, and by 'why' mean to find a necessary and sufficient set of causes, then we must look to physical chains of events and eliminate each until the phenomena is no longer present. That is an empirical investigation, not a philosophical one. — Isaac
But his post was not a position, or not just a position, it was a response or presented as a response. And when taken as a response, a critical arguement is, and fairly basic things were asked about it, I don't think it held up as a counterargument or response to the post it was responding to. Yes, he presented his opinion. It's a discussion forum. I thought it was an odd response to be questioned about it in that context, however much I truly do admire his open and humble explanation of why he draws the conclusion he does.If, rather, we want to know which concepts about why consciousness arise are internally non-contradicory and consistent with what empirical evidence we have, then such is an ideal task for amateur philosophy to be engaged in. But by that standard, T Clark's position is as good as any other. It is not internally contradictory, and it is not overwhelmingly contradicted by empirical evidence. — Isaac
I haven't written any posts about whether Terrapin is a moron in this thread or whether anyone else is. Earlier I raised the issue of the specific case of people who want to limit free speech, iow do not share Terrapin's aboslutism, posting insults at him. I thought this was ironic, though not necessarily hypocritical (I now add) since this would depend on their ideas about what should be limited. It was pointed out to me that I had missed insults aimed at the people who wanted to limit free speech and I did find one specifically hurled by Terrapin. Of course, he, given his position need not have a problem with the hurling of insults.The topic here is 'Should hate speech be allowed' not whether Terrapin (or anyone else) is a moron. — Baden
and Terrapin can go advertise his absolutist views on his own discussion if that's all he wants to do — Baden
And then we have to deal with the waste for thousands of years, and the security around that waste. Which means government and likely outsourced private security or monitoring passed on for generations or until some safe more complete technological solution is found. So, current profits paid for by random masses of future people. And that's all fi it goes well, where the measures work. If they don't, well, that also will have various kinds of costs.Furthermore, the budget for decommissioning is gigantic, and probably also still underestimated by at least an order of magnitude. — alcontali
The word 'context' is very general. I don't think there needs to be any evidence it is the case or observations that somehow lead one to believe the conjecture is true. I would assume that any intelligible statement/conjecture would be within some already mapped out area of knowledge. And that area of knowledge would include observations, but none of them need indicate the conjecture is true. But then, that would be evidence.A conjecture without evidence, maybe...but a conjecture without context? (A context will consist in some observations that have been used to construct it surely?). — Janus