The censor’s assumption that words and expression can alter the world around us is closer to sorcery than anything else. — NOS4A2
The thinking used to justify the inquisition of Russell illustrates the common overestimation of the power of speech — NOS4A2
And that is not only false, but patently absurd, as the counterexamples I've previously raised in response to this ludicrous claim of yours demonstrate. Karl Marx, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Adolf Hitler, Winston Churchill, Socrates, William Shakespeare, Martin Luther, the Four Evangelists... none of the aforementioned were sorcerers. They were just world-renowned wordsmiths.
The advertising industry illustrates how very widespread this estimation is, and how much money hard nosed business women are prepared to put where their mouths are by way of amplification. Indeed no one would bother to hire a professor in the first place if their speech was not influential. It would be a weird metaphysics to imagine speech to be anything other than powerful.
No they weren’t sorcerers, because they cannot change matter with their words. — NOS4A2
Had no one read or heard their mystical words, nothing would have been changed. — NOS4A2
You can try this with your own words. The societal changes, the altered matter, begin with the listeners not the speakers. — NOS4A2
So? If the words didn't motivate them, then the societal changes they action wouldn't have occurred. It's easy to refute your claims and suggestions through a reduction to the absurd.
The problem is we treat the words as agents and the humans as the objects they act upon. Words motivate us, incite us, inspire us, encourage us. It’s a habit of language, but likely a folk psychology. But It’s the other way about. We act upon the words: we read them, hear them, understand them. — NOS4A2
There's no problem here besides the peculiar one that you've invented. There's no contradiction there. Words have an effect on us and we act on them.
You say this yet your words remain completely ineffectual. Perhaps moving them around in a different order or combination will illicit the effect you desire. — NOS4A2
Is it possible to describe it in biological or physical terms? — NOS4A2
Is there a middle ground you would consider, where the speaker and listener both contribute to the effects of speech? This would be an alternative explanation as to why speech effects peoples actions sometimes and other times not rather than explaining that as you are doing. (Saying that speech never effects peoples actions).
Some idiot might attempt it. Bla bla neurones, bla, pathways, bla behaviour, bla. I prefer mental terms like 'belief'. People tend to believe professors and thus are influenced in their actions. So if your professor is Hitler...
Then why do you advocate for censorship? If the words have no agency, what is there to fear? — NOS4A2
Agency is not the issue. It's a category error with regard to words, and a category error that no one has made. I'm not sure you understand what that word means. I advocate for censorship in a very limited sense in accordance with the United Kingdom laws on freedom of speech, which includes the United Nations Declaration on freedom of speech, because of the effect which they can have on people.
And that is not only false, but patently absurd, as the counterexamples I've previously raised in response to this ludicrous claim of yours demonstrate. Karl Marx, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Adolf Hitler, Winston Churchill, Socrates, William Shakespeare, Martin Luther, the Four Evangelists... none of the aforementioned were sorcerers. They were just world-renowned wordsmiths. — S
The advertising industry illustrates how very widespread this estimation is, — unenlightened
So why censor words and punish those who speak them if the words they speak are unable to act upon other human beings? — NOS4A2
The UK law on freedom of speech includes article 19, sure, but contradicts it in the very next clause by limiting freedom of speech with a wide array of regulations. — NOS4A2
What would be patently absurd is to say that their words are what altered the world. Non-speech actions alter the world, and we need to look at the causes of those non-speech actions. Words can have an influence, but they don't cause the actions in question. (And we're back in the middle of the thread we already beat to death.) — Terrapin Station
And illustrates the overestimation very well. If that weren't the case, no one would ever go out of business. They'd merely need to advertise and they'd make tons of money. — Terrapin Station
It's hard to tell whether you're being silly with your choice of words and the way that you're interpreting them, or whether you're saying something agreeable. I don't condone driving over speed limit, but not on the basis that the car itself will somehow gain agency and drive itself into people of it's own accord.
It doesn't contradict it.
No, it's not patently absurd to say that their words altered the world, so long as that's not interpreted in a silly way. Words do have an influence, as you say, and that entails that they're causal, because again, I don't interpret influence in a silly way. — S
That doesn't work as an attempted refutation. That some businesses overestimate the effect that advertising will have to the detriment of their business doesn't do anything at all against his point. — S
I can’t tell whether your false analogies are child-like or if you actually believe them to be analogous. I’m saying that words have zero power over human beings and in fact it is the other way about. If this is the case, why would we ban the words? — NOS4A2
Again, I don’t think there are any effects of speech beyond the measurable. I believe humans have agency, not the words. We act upon words and not the other way about. — NOS4A2
I don't care about you saying that words have zero power over human beings when that flies in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. You've been given a million examples evidencing this, and any response from you which just misinterprets that claim as I understand it is just missing the point. — S
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