What would be an example of a performative contradiction of mine, then? — Terrapin Station
What would determine who it includes? — Terrapin Station
I'd not have any laws based on psychological effects period. — Terrapin Station
Sure, it's possible to be wrong about them, although basically we have to argue counterfactuals and counterfactual truth values are close to impossible. — Terrapin Station
In the cases at hand, it's not an issue of disagreeing over what the consequences would be, but feeling differently about the consequences regarding whether they're acceptable/desirable or not. — Terrapin Station
You do not merely find these consequences acceptable/desirable as a matter of foundational feeling, they are too specific for you to have a gut feeling about, you would be thinking about consequences still. — Isaac
Again. You're not king remember? — Benkei
A measurement can be in accordance with some standard, but it would be difficult to argue for a usage of "correct" that doesn't have a normative connotation. You'd have to keep pointing out that you're using a non-normative "correct," because it would be read with a normative connotation in the vast majority of cases. — Terrapin Station
The problem is that there's no should to being in accordance with some standard, aside from one personally feeling that way. — Terrapin Station
Saying things that there's no way in hell that you actually believe, like that you don't know whether or not I believe that I'm on the moon, and that the meaning of words like these is entirely subjective, and that you have no position in this discussion. — S
We've spoke about this before. Weren't you a teacher? — S
Have you noticed that you're the only one who has this problem? — S
It's not a problem now, and it never was a problem to begin with. There's no "should" in saying that something is 7". — S
Someone can be correct or incorrect according to a standard, — DingoJones
M can be any conceivable ethical stance. — Terrapin Station
S can simply feel that either yes, it would be morally acceptable to sue the team in question, or no, it wouldn't be morally acceptable, where S's decision is simply S's intuitive or "gut" feeling, without S's decision resting on some other moral stance that S holds. — Terrapin Station
I disagree with those statements — Isaac
(b) you apparently insisting that people can't be that different than you are — Terrapin Station
I don't buy that there are unconscious mental phenomena period. — Terrapin Station
If you wanted to try to forward an empirical claim that all moral stances of a certain type MUST be based on earlier or intuitive moral stances of another type, whether those other/earlier stances are conscious or not, that would be a near-impossible task . . . and not the least difficulty would arise in trying to plausibly define the types of moral stances to even begin. — Terrapin Station
-The neuroscience of morality and social decision-making, Keith J. Yoder and Jean DecetyDecades of research across multiple disciplines, including behavioral economics, developmental psychology, and social neuroscience, indicate that moral reasoning arises from complex social decision-making and involves both unconscious and deliberate processes which rely on several partially distinct dimensions, including intention understanding, harm aversion, reward and value coding, executive functioning, and rule learning
Let's start with psychological abuse. You can basically verbally abuse your kids because protected by free speech and child protection services can't intervene.
I'm claiming that the psychological evidence we have indicates that people behave this way. — Isaac
Oh, NOW you want to make an appeal to what everyone else thinks. Lol — DingoJones
Someone can be correct or incorrect according to a particular standard, but not correct or incorrect about adopting that standard, right? — DingoJones
Would you like to make a wager on whether a large majority (say >85%) of people assign a normative connotation to the word "correct" in various contexts? I'll put up any amount of money you'd like. We'll put it in escrow. Then we'll set up a research project to check whether people assign a normative connotation to that term.
You use the term normatively all the time. The only time you try to not do that is when it's pointed out that you do. I don't know why you don't want to admit that you use the term that way. — Terrapin Station
The "should" is in saying that it's correct to say that it's 7" and that it's correct to use a particular standard. — Terrapin Station
"Correct" is the term that has a normative connotation to the vast majority of people. — Terrapin Station
Can you give an example of the psychological evidence you're referring to? At least that would take the conversation somewhere different. — Terrapin Station
The paper I cited is a really good overview. — Isaac
I dont understand why its suddenly important to you how other people use words. — DingoJones
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