You don't post as if you're interested in my views per se. — Terrapin Station
you want to argue where it's clear that either you didn't really (closely) read, or didn't understand what I wrote, or you simply would rather be dishonest as a tactic. — Terrapin Station
You don't know how you know that the world isn't flat? — S
That’s the line of thinking for blasphemy laws for instance, that evil words beget evil deeds and laws against it must be enforced in order to protect the greater public good. It turns out it wasn’t so sensible.
— NOS4A2
Yes. Banning blasphemy turns out not to be conducive to a healthy society. Banning homosexuality turned out not to be necessary either, so should we now repeal the law against all sexual activity including rape and child molestation? — Isaac
That's because I'm not interested in your views per se, why on earth would I be interested in the views of a random Internet poster, — Isaac
I'm interested in your views to the extent to which they represent insurmountable flaws in mine. I don't want to have flawed views — Isaac
Sure I do. Surprisingly it has nothing to do with popular opinion or your brain. So how do we know that people are often right, then? That's what I had asked you. — Terrapin Station
For things like "should hate speech be banned," it's not even as if there's a correct answer in the first place. — Terrapin Station
Yes. Banning blasphemy turns out not to be conducive to a healthy society. Banning homosexuality turned out not to be necessary either, so should we now repeal the law against all sexual activity including rape and child molestation? No, because guess what... It turns out the world is actually a little bit complicated.
Surprisingly it transpires that in a system involving the interacting desires and abilities of 7 billion heterogeneous individuals one blanket rule doesn't quite predict the best results.
Your neighbor practices his electric guitar until five in the AM and your bed actually vibrates - and not in a fun way. No way to call in the law? or can one? How do you see something like this getting resolved? — Coben
I'd have "sensory ordinances" similar to what we have now re sounds, smells, flashing lights, etc. — Terrapin Station
Actually they banned homosexuality for the same reasons they ban hate speech: indecency, a sort of moral panic, and not as a crime against another person. — NOS4A2
But that is a criterion that can be adapted to many purposes. No doubt the Chinese Communist Party could claim that the Hong Kong protestors are encouraging ‘hatred against the Motherland’. And in China, you can be jailed indefinitely on that basis. — Wayfarer
I pointed out that that sensory ordinances like the ones we have now include noises which are merely "disturbing" — Isaac
Either it has to be at a particular time of day--during the time when most people are sleeping, or otherwise there would have to be something unusual about it that could pose a physical threat to you. — Terrapin Station
Yes, you can't just tell the police that some noise is annoying you personally and expect to have it stopped, — Isaac
I just wrote the same thing. The mere fact that you don't like a sound isn't sufficient. — Terrapin Station
The point is that you are advocating that hate speech laws to go back even further - to say that actual physical harm must be proven in order to constitute an offence, whilst at the same time endorsing noise ordinances which do not go back that far. Noise ordinances do not allow just anyone to claim offense (just like hate speech laws don't) but they do take a reasonable view of the sorts of noises the majority of people are likely to find disturbing - loud or high pitched repetitive noises particularly at a time when most people prefer quiet (just like speech laws take a reasonable view of the sorts of speech most people are likely to find disturbing). So I'm confused as to why you'd advocate the former, but not the latter. — Isaac
If the speech is loud and persistent enough at night that you can't sleep, I have no problem with enforcing that it stop. — Terrapin Station
Why? It's causing no physical damage. 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? I can only think of the fact that any reasonable person would consider it disturbing, an entirely mental consequence of an entirely external sound. I just can't see why that's not the case for hateful speech. — Isaac
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
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