Since you're non-responsive on the point, may I take it that you agree that, while speech alone by itself cannot lift a stone, that that same speech may be deployed to persuade - and persuade - a human agent to lift the stone, and be intended to accomplish that exact result?
Or a different example: either of a policeman or an armed robber tells you to raise your hands; aren't you inclined, as a result of that speech act, to raise your hands? — tim wood
You certainly base decisions to do things on speech, sure.
What matters to me when we're talking about ethics, proposing legislation, etc., is the fact that you decided to do something and were not forced to do it. — Terrapin Station
What matters to me when we're talking about ethics, proposing legislation, etc., is the fact that you decided to do something and were not forced to do it. — Terrapin Station
What are your principles for deciding what amount of control is sufficient for ethical or legal considerations? — Echarmion
...conflicts don't emerge from countries having armed forces. — ssu
It's simply an intuitive stipulation based on my dispositions.
With anything less than force a la physical causality, the person could have decided to do something different. — Terrapin Station
With anything less than force a la physical causality, the person could have decided to do something different.
— Terrapin Station
Right. But that leaves only physically manipulating someone's limbs. Not a very common scenario in practice. — Echarmion
No you don't, and you should be deeply ashamed of yourself.
But you did, in your previous post, state that you'd still have laws against criminal threats. How do those relate to your speech position? — Echarmion
No I’m not. You were triggered that I defended the free speech of Nazis, and said I should be ashamed. Then I showed how civil rights activists do the same. I’d love to watch you tell the head of the ACLU that he should be ashamed of himself for defending the free speech of Nazis. — NOS4A2
Yes you are, and I would have no qualms about telling him so, except that it wouldn't count as free speech under U.K. law, so over here he wouldn't be defending free speech, he would be defending rightly prohibited hate speech.
No I’m not. Free speech is the same everywhere, it’s just that the degrees of censorship are different. So yes, he would be defending free speech, as other human rights defenders always have. You would be defending censorship. — NOS4A2
If you're disputing what I said, then you are factually incorrect. It wouldn't count as free speech under U.K. law. I cited the law to you earlier, on a public forum, for us all to see. In the U.K., it wouldn't be defending free speech, it would be defending the crime known as hate speech. And if you reply with your usual denials, then you're just wasting your breath.
I’m talking of free speech, not UK law and their fevered and infantilizing censorship. It’s becoming more apparent you do not even know what free speech is. — NOS4A2
I posted this earlier in the thread, but here it is again:
Threatening anyone should only be a crime when it's an immediate, "physical" threat in the sense of potential victims being within the range of the threatening instruments (whether just one's body, or weapons, or causally connected remote devices or substances, etc.), which are actual and not simply claimed, so that (a) either a verbal (or written, etc.) or body language or weaponry threat is explicitly made/performed, (b) the threat is reasonably considered either a serious premeditation to commit nonconsensual violence or something with negligent culpability should nonconsensual physical damage result, and (c) the threatened party couldn't reasonably escape or evade the threatened actions should the threatener decide or negligently carry them out at that moment. — Terrapin Station
You're talking about your own favoured conception of free speech, which to be clear you should be calling absolute free speech. That's the version for fanatics. I'm talking about free speech as defined by the law in the United Kingdom, as I always have been from the very beginning. That's the version for people with a sense of perspective. I made it clear that I was going by a legal definition early on.
Yeah, I hold the conception found in Article 19 of the UN declaration of human rights. These are not fanatics.
You’re speaking of the censorship and regulation of free expression as defined by law. — NOS4A2
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