Propose a reasonable benefit of hate speech. — Shamshir
We don't have a burden to constantly satisfy your unreasonable doubts and denials. — S
Will you or won't you propose a reasonable benefit of hate speech? — Shamshir
You know that there aren't any facts as to whether something is a benefit or not, right? — Terrapin Station
This is very odd to say because it suggests that the problem has nothing to do with semantics but rather quite literally with word choices, with the sounds or looks (if written) of certain words. — Terrapin Station
That would make the word 'benefit' meaningless — Isaac
So if I say, "it is of benefit to me to have a raincoat", I'm referring to my opinion of what a benefit is. — Isaac
I haven't specified in that sentence the means by which such heterogeneous opinion is summarised. — Isaac
Usually by democratically elected representatives, but it could be sociologists, psychologist, — Isaac
I'm not sure (other than for rhetorical value) why you've missed of the end of my sentence. I said " is possible to express every idea in non-hateful ways, unless that idea is actual hate". So no, it's not entirely to do with certain word choices, but it is considerably to with that. — Isaac
What bearing on anything does the fact that most people consider it to have no benefit have? — Terrapin Station
The question is whether hate speech "should" be allowed, which is a normative question. — Isaac
So you don't agree with S that you were only saying what most people considered a benefit? — Terrapin Station
What do normatives have to do with what most people think? — Terrapin Station
They don't. I never suggested they did. — Isaac
If x is a common opinion about the benefit of anything, the significance or implication of that is? — Terrapin Station
If the fact that most people consider it to have no benefit has no bearing on it being a normative question, then why was that your answer to the question you quoted? — Terrapin Station
It is a normative question, that's just the definition of normative. — Isaac
Imposing something on society which most people consider to be of little benefit, despite what they consider to be a risk of harm, is going to be generally agreed on them to be bad. Sure.
The question is what the implication of that is for anything else. — Terrapin Station
If you don't share any foundational views about what is good or bad with your interlocutors, there is no point in engaging in a normative discussion. — Isaac
Normatives are NOT determined by "what most people think." This is a very important point. — Terrapin Station
OK, we'll try it a fifth time. Normatives are determined by individuals on the basis of what they consider to be good and bad. We are having a discussion about a normative. If we do not agree on anything that is good or bad, that discussion is pointless. — Isaac
So we apparently don't agree on foundational views about what is good or bad, yet you're continuing to post to me about this topic. — Terrapin Station
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