What do you mean by that? Why wouldn't it? — S
Yes, but so what? I never at any point said that conventional usage is the only possible standard of correctness. I very clearly said that it is the default standard. — S
I think there was a huge amount of handwaving in the dash in freedom/randomness. What you’ve said so far is that you believe that there are random and determined events. But we can both agree that a random event doesn’t amount to a choice right? — khaled
If course I'm not just saying that. Haven't you been listening? I'm saying that when that's what's meant, and when you interpret that meaning accordingly, then that's correct, that's successful communication. Why the hell us that so difficult for you to a) understand, and b) acknowledge? You haven't given any sensible response to that. — S
In a sense, yes. Like Baden said, we're not dealing in absolutes. So, under the working assumption that willingness in this context indicates correctness, then obviously you would indeed be incorrect if you're not willing. — S
This is a simple matter of whether you're willing to use a word, "correct", like the rest of us, in a situation which makes sense, or whether you're going to continue to resist on no reasonable basis, given that your arguments miss the point. — S
So will causes physical phenomena but is not caused by it? You seem to be describing something akin to magic here. Is not caused or explained by the laws of physics yet can directly apply a force here or there. — khaled
"1. free from error; in accordance with fact or truth".
If your interpretation matches the intended meaning (a matter if fact or truth with which you would be in accordance with) then that's a successful match and you would have understood me correctly, not misunderstood me, meaning an erroneous interpretation.
I shouldn't even have to explain that, as it's obvious. You're not a child, so why are you acting like one? — S
I find it really silly that you don't want to use the word "correct" like the rest of us, — S
Yes, but in order to be coherent there are certain presumptions to be made including that there is a standard of correctness that we can both agree on with regards to the meaning of words. — Baden
Then you must use some other word than "correct" which has no practical difference in meaning. — S
By that I'm not incorrect in assuming you mean I am obviously right and you are obviously wrong? — Baden
I wouldn't be incorrect in interpreting this to mean that you think it makes communication impossible? — Baden
I think Terrapin has solidified his stance on this issue enough that he could have the discussion in his sleep, — ZhouBoTong
But you haven’t answered whether or not they CAUSE physical phenomena. — khaled
What about other animals? — khaled
What it means is that the manner in which you use the word "chair" does not correspond to the manner in which English speaking people do. — Magnus Anderson
But again, by his own logic, you are not incorrect in using 'use' to mean 'don't use' (and it would be fallacious to claim otherwise) and he cannot know that that is not the usage you are employing, so his own statement above is incorrect. So what it means in practice to have no notion of correct usage is that you cannot make any claim about what anyone says without clarifying their meaning, and then clarifying the clarification, and so on ad infinitum. The upshot of no usage being correct is the impossibility of communication. — Baden
But I agreed with everything you said. I just used words in a non-consensus way so that they meant their opposites. — Baden
And that's precisely what we want to know when it comes to the correct meaning of words. — Magnus Anderson
Exactly. Terrapin Station, can't you see the absurdity in making such a charge in these cases? — S
It's been explained to you multiple times that correct usage is determined by consensus for certain facts, such as social facts, and for definitions of words etc. — Baden
No, we can say it is a fact that he is President. — Baden
I think Terrapin Station's idea is cute. Now I get to say it's just an argumentum ad populum to claim that Donald Trump is president of the US. Like, that's just conformity, dude. — Baden
Your car, which a relationship between a combustion engine, wheels, tires, drive train, etc. is to the left (another a relationship) of your body, which I already said is a relationship between your various organs. — Harry Hindu
refusing to use a person's chosen pronouns does slightly deny their right to exist as such. — thewonder
If you were to engage in a debate with an Arab Muslim over Islam, then they would have more of an existential stake in the debate. The hegemony of Western culture does not deny your right to exist. You don't really have anything to lose by engaging in the debate. The other perspective has more 'weight' to it or something. It doesn't mean that they're right. It just means that they have more of an existential stake in the debate. — thewonder
There is no claim that you attest by making an argument. — thewonder
You aren't of a marginalized position — thewonder
don't need to stake your existence — thewonder
A person who is queer has to contend the validity of their being — thewonder
Imagine if I exclusively decided to refer to you as "she" or "her" in a demeaning sexist sense. Terrapin Station made a comment. She is totally off of her rocker. You would, at first, probably ignore this as you would consider yourself to be someone who is above engaging in such a discourse, but would probably eventually be bothered by it enough to address me with why it is that you don't think that I should do that. — thewonder
If you don't care about etiquette in general this is a deeper problem than just apparently bollocks pronouns, sis. — fdrake
If someone wants to be a fucking genderqueer blue wolf who uses "zem" pronouns why the hell do you care. — fdrake
You have no existential stake in the argument. — thewonder
They get the preference because they have the stake in the argument. — thewonder
Your stubborn insistence upon maintaining the rules of English grammar — thewonder
You call those two somethings, "particles". I call them relationships. — Harry Hindu
Also, isn't it interesting how we have to resort to BELIEVING, or NOT BELIEVING, in the truth of epistemologies, rather than relying, instead, on the possibility of empirically verifying them, or not? We know the empirical reasons why we believe that Einstein's theories are "truer" than Newton's. — charles ferraro
Your demands disregard the demands of others. — thewonder
