The point is that this is how the world works, so there's no use pointing it out and pretending that because its 'wrong' — AmadeusD
There simply are no sound criteria for considering one race to be, tout court, inferior to another. — Janus
Specifically I want to explore the question of whether this claim is empirically or logically falsifiable. — Leontiskos
What could falsify our claim? — Leontiskos
You're not looking at the bigger picture. Arguments that are in line with what secular academia considers "critical thinking" have a very limited scope of application outside of philosophy classes (and even there, the professor is by default right, no matter what).Now I have no idea what, "this is how the world works" is supposed to mean. The claim was literally, "A blow with a baseball bat could falsify the claim in question." That looks to be entirely wrong, irrational, and unphilosophical, not to mention having nothing to do with "how the world works." The world does not work via baseball-bat falsification.
Presumably what is happening here is that yet another person does not know how to justify their belief about racism, and in this case they are resorting to threats of physical violence to enforce their position within society. "I don't know how to reason for my belief about racism, but if someone contradicts me I will hit them with a baseball bat and that should take care of things. 'That's how the world works'." — Leontiskos
(I think) The point is that this is how the world works, so there's no use pointing it out and pretending that because its 'wrong', we don't reason that way. — AmadeusD
The claim was literally, "A blow with a baseball bat could falsify the claim in question." — Leontiskos
The world does not work via baseball-bat falsification. — Leontiskos
And shame on you for suggesting I was a racist. — baker
The world does not work via baseball-bat falsification. — Leontiskos
It does. — AmadeusD
People do use violence as a 'valid retort' to various positions. — AmadeusD
What's being suggested is you are being sanguine to the point of irrelevancy. — AmadeusD
They think it's logical. — AmadeusD
Ignorance of how the world actually works (i.e how people actually reason) isn't fixed by inserting a (totally reasonable, and valid) position on the logic of those impulses. — AmadeusD
There simply are no sound criteria for considering one race to be, tout court, inferior to another. — Janus
That is an anti-racist claim, and we are asking whether it is falsifiable. It seems that you and baker have missed the whole point. I am asking whether @Janus' anti-racist claim is falsifiable, given that Janus has said that falsifiability is the key to rationality and claim-making. — Leontiskos
It's not that anti-racist claims are falsifiable. — Janus
The anti-racist claim is made on the basis of the unverifiability, and further, the complete unsupportability, of the racist claim. — Janus
So consider two charges:
"Your position is unverifiable."
"Your position is unsupportable." — Leontiskos
Think of the claim that red is a superior colour to green. I reject that because it is unsupportable, If I say there are no sound criteria for considering red to be superior to green, is that claim falsifiable? — Janus
There simply are no sound criteria for considering one race to be, tout court, inferior to another. — Janus
"No race is, tout court, inferior to another." — Leontiskos
Why is it unsupportable? You simply ask the claimant what they mean by "superior" and go from there. — Leontiskos
Thus if there is some race which is equivalent to a beast, such as an ox, then that race can be permissibly enslaved. We would be able to provide the racist with a falsifiable case, "Okay racist, so if you can demonstrate that this race has no greater dignity than an ox, then you will have proved that it is permissible to enslave them." — Leontiskos
Any support they come up with will necessarily be merely subjective, while it purports to be a universally valid claim. — Janus
Such a race would obviously not be human. — Janus
If you are making a claim that says, "no, not tout court inferior," and the racist is making a claim that says, "yes, tout court inferior," and you say that "tout court inferior" is as subjective as the color claim, then both of you are making merely subjective claims, and neither one of you has any rational basis for enforcing your claim. — Leontiskos
On your reasoning if we found an alien species, how would we know how to treat it? — Leontiskos
"Not tout court inferior" is not a subjective claim but a refutation of the masquerade. — Janus
I don't agree with enslaving any species. — Janus
So someone can't objectively identify when X is present because to do so is impossible, but you are able to objectively identify when X is absent? Again, this makes no sense. Is it the unfalsifiable sophistry coming up again. — Leontiskos
I don't have to show X is absent. — Janus
How so? Give an argument. — Leontiskos
People do use violence as a 'valid retort' to various positions. They think its justified. They think it's logical. — AmadeusD
About what? Name it. Stop being intentionally ambiguous. — Leontiskos
You're simply engaged in the fallacy of equivocation. "In the real world if you deny X then you will get hit with a baseball bat, therefore X is falsifiable." That's an invalid argument. We're talking about falsifiability, not the ability to coercively enforce a belief. — Leontiskos
No one is suggesting there is logic in that. — AmadeusD
That is an anti-racist claim, and we are asking whether it is falsifiable. It seems that you and baker have missed the whole point. — Leontiskos
The problem is that you don't think you are required to give a falsifiable reason for why the claim fails to demonstrate the presence of X. — Leontiskos
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