Sure, but it seems like when free speech comes up and the strong advocates advocate for it they think in terms of legislation. Let's not have any legislation limiting free speech. I rarely hear much attack on the private sector for its inhibition of free speech - of course this is a vast thread and there are many threads out there and I may miss them, but it seems like the private limitation is not really noticed. And it is endemic.Yes of course, censorship exists. If the boss believed in free speech, on the other hand, she might not be fired. — NOS4A2
Sure, but it seems like when free speech comes up and the strong advocates advocate for it they think in terms of legislation. Let's not have any legislation limiting free speech. I rarely hear much attack on the private sector for its inhibition of free speech - of course this is a vast thread and there are many threads out there and I may miss them, but it seems like the private limitation is not really noticed. And it is endemic.
A stimulus led to my not sleeping. This should also be considered in the context of the post before the one about loss of sleep, where I asked why verbal expression is to be protected at all costs various kinds of artistic, in this case musical protection need not be. People can soundproof their houses and all that. — Coben
Let's not shift to what my solution might be, let's stay here and see why some stimuli are protected and others not, that is your position. Perhaps my solution would be a poor one but that wouldn't mean yours doesn't have problems. — Coben
No, I am arguing that threats of violence are such an effective stimuli that they need only be delivered once to have endocrine reactions in large numbers of humans since they are social mammals with active limbic systems. Not all, but many. I gave a specific example, but there would be a category of threats.I obviously wouldn't make legislation based on any arbitrary thing bothering any arbitrary individual. That's what you seem to be arguing for. — Terrapin Station
This kind of thing is not a good symptom. Obviously it is not desirable that a government department should have any power of censorship (except security censorship, which no one objects to in war time) over books which are not officially sponsored. But the chief danger to freedom of thought and speech at this moment is not the direct interference of the MOI or any official body. If publishers and editors exert themselves to keep certain topics out of print, it is not because they are frightened of prosecution but because they are frightened of public opinion. In this country intellectual cowardice is the worst enemy a writer or journalist has to face, and that fact does not seem to me to have had the discussion it deserves.
No, I am arguing that threats of violence are such an effective stimuli that they need only be delivered once to have endocrine reactions in large numbers of humans since they are social mammals with active limbic systems . . . — Coben
In your system verbal expression must be protected in all cases.
Other types of expression can be shut down.
I am not sure why.
Sensory and verbal stimuli and physical contact stimuli have different effects on different people. The receivers personalities and measures taken affect what they experience. I wouldn't protect one category of stimuli and not others. Or better put, I would include verbal stimuli. I prefer to have a society where intentionally created unpleasant experience can be responded to with moderate violence. You cause unpleasance, you experience unpleasance. And we look at individual cases and decide as a group. Whether tribe or jury process or DAs. No jury would convict me for slapping someone who said they were going to rape my child. It wouldn't get to the DAs desk.But what does that have to do with the fact that I'd legislate persistent sensory stimuli of a certain intensity etc.? — Terrapin Station
It does for the guitar player. We got people in these scenarios.It doesn't have anything to do with expression.
It can cause you to not be able to sleep. That's not very controversial. — Terrapin Station
I think the issue is partly coming down to a damning of the limbic system or emotions. IOW if it is possible to change the way you relate to emotions and this is a factor in the disturbing stimuli, then you with the emotional reaction should have no legal recourse. It is your problem.As Coben has already indicated, there is ample relationship between anxiety from verbal bullying and loss of sleep, but you'd say they chose to react that way but needn't. Why the different approach to annoying noises? — Isaac
You may have read how I tried above to show that physical pain and emotional pain (fear caused by threats) both in the end have to do with the limbic system. It's unpleasant, we don't like it. — Coben
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? — Isaac
I am not sure if this is what is happening, but it seems like it. So I am trying to shift my responses to. I prefer X, what's wrong with that? — Coben
Well, I'm a free musical instrument playing absolutist, so I don't believe that there should be any laws restricting the freedom to play drums really loudly all night, every night, when your neighbours are trying to sleep. — S
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