Well, for me, I almost can't help but want to reason with people in situations like that. I find it hard to move on. That's partly why banning me from the forum would be a good thing. — S
They end in failure because they start with the charitable assumption that the other person can be reasoned with, but fail because the other person can't be. — S
What, the measurement? I've never seen one. All that's in the world outside of mind is (if anything at all) a sea of heterogeneous stuff. All objects, measurements, laws, and concepts are constructions of the human mind. — Isaac
Yes, hence my reluctance to go back over the several thousand experimental results firming the history of psychological research in order to demonstrate that this has already been considered. — Isaac
Where is it then? — Isaac
We can't make objective measurements. — Isaac
How is "I measured the earth and found it to be flat" not a subjective report? — Isaac
OK, so how do we go about holding any theory at all by that standard? We have a theory that the earth is round but Bill says he measured it and it came out flat. Do we have to re-think our theory, or just dismiss Bill's results as probably an error? — Isaac
yet, is it not true that death instantiates the import of the framing condition in a self-referential manner to set the proposition as sensible? — Wallows
We can't insist that "there really was a beetle in the box that time, too--it must have just been invisible" — Terrapin Station
So, the main thing you'd need to explain to counter this theory, is what the prefrontal cortex is doing when making complex moral choices, if they are just intuited. — Isaac
No, my speech doesn't affect your psychological state any ways so it doesn't make you wonder or think in any case. — Benkei
Yes, whatever should that be showing? Maybe think about it before replying. — Benkei
Here's a thought experiment:
99 persons say punching someone in the face should be allowed.
1 Terrapin Station says it shouldn't.
TS is welcome to his opinion but is punched in the face nevertheless. — Benkei
We are disagreeing on facts — Benkei
So your free speech absolutism cannot work because it assumes conditions that don't exist. — Benkei
Right... so numerous neuroscientists and psychologists have established the link between abusive language and behavioural issues with children. — Benkei
You are just pretending it doesn't exist by claiming only a specific type of causality exists. — Benkei
Offering up such a persuasive definition is just semantics and ignores the work in the field of psychology. — Benkei
Those consequences have been documented and scientifically proved. — Benkei
Your disagreement with facts is noted but can be ignored as inconsequential. — Benkei
And all those people working in advertisement and speech writers are really not influencing anything. — Benkei
If one thinks in moral terms, and calls someone 'mean' I can't really imagine how that person has not acted from that meanness and thus been immoral in what ever that person's moral system is. It can't just be nasty thoughts. And even something like meanspirited...it seems to me there would be actions. I could imagine saying 'that guy feels mean or hateful or something. But to call someone mean, I think, needs to be coupled to prior acts. — Coben
Uhm. Why must it be forced (whatever that means) and why not "caused"? — Benkei
All thought is caused by speech that we learned from others. — Benkei
You don't see an ethical issue with removing any protection children would have against psychological abuse from their parents? — Benkei
Good warriors and true have tried the sword of reason to evict the resident Troll from his cave, and, alas, all have failed. :rofl: — Janus
Yes, wishful thinking isn't addressing the point. I don't think there's much to talk about if you don't believe protecting children from psychological abuse is more important than parents' rights to abuse their children. — Benkei
No, I'm asking you, given the reality that psychological child abuse exists what you're going to do about that sort of abuse if your position is that the speech acts of the parents, which cause such harm, is entirely legal because it cannot be limited in any way. It seems you're not going to do anything about it and just accept child abuse, because you're ok with it. — Benkei
So basically what you seem to be saying is that "if the world worked totally differently I'd be in favour of free speech absolutism". — Benkei
What is your definition of a mean person or someone being mean? — schopenhauer1
First off, I explicitly asked you to reply given the nature of reality where you're not king. I again get a reply "I'm telling you what I'd do" but that's just made-up nonsense if it's not grounded in reality. You keep on doing this and are effectively not answering my questions at all as a result. — Benkei
Really? The FACT that they made no effort to hide it means we have a LOT of evidence. — ZhouBoTong
Are you comfortable admitting that Jefferson and Washington were racist? — ZhouBoTong
Surely, owning slaves (based on race) counts as evidence of their racism? — ZhouBoTong
Is it really debatable that "prior to the Civil War" at least 51% of Americans were racist? — ZhouBoTong
However, it is fairly (entirely?) consistent through history that the lower classes are more racist (and the racist representatives they voted for represent their racism). — ZhouBoTong
The paper is basically a summary of the state of psychological and neuroscienetific thinking on the matter. If you're not going to trust the expert judgement (which I've already outlined), then there's nothing much in that paper to go on. This is the problem with your attitude that any expert position can be critically examined. There have been literally thousands of experiments done in this field. You cannot possibly examine them all, nor would you have the background knowledge to do so. Experts in the field examine some of them, other experts collate the conclusions of those experts, other experts summarise all that in conclusions like the one I quoted. Could they all be wrong? Absolutely. Have we got a chance in hell of reasonably demonstrating that they are? No.
If you want to critically examine the experiments which have lead to the conclusions I cited, be my guest. There are 95 citations in that paper alone, and many of those are citing other summaries which themselves have scores of experimental results cited. I'll find a link to the paper, when you've read through the several thousand experiments it collectively cites, I'd love to hear your thoughts on their conclusions. — Isaac