True, but then it's also not someone threatening someone else. It's a dangerous situation. — Echarmion
Are you saying threatening someone doesn't require communication? — Echarmion
That's not just an idea my friend. — creativesoul
No, that wouldn't be at all sufficient. I have specific conditions that need to be met that I make explicit. — Terrapin Station
?? But I'm defining what I'd name "criminal threatening." Nothing less than what I'm describing would count. That's why I'm spelling all of that stuff out. Those are the criteria. Think of it like a checklist. — Terrapin Station
It doesn't require speech. I make that explicit in my criteria. — Terrapin Station
But the threat can be speech. — Echarmion
Why would I care about that?!? — S
And one of these criteria is that a threat is made (by someone, towards someone else, is implied). — Echarmion
But the threat can be speech. — Echarmion
I was asked about my view on it. I pasted what my policy would be. If you're not interested in that, then don't read (or bother commenting on) the post. The idea isn't to capture some common notion of the term (or rather some common notion of when it's morally or legally problematic). — Terrapin Station
But there are priorities here, like the truth, like common sense, like being reasonable. — S
It can include speech, but again, the speech is not at all sufficient for it to be a problem. Hence me spelling out all of the criteria. — Terrapin Station
But the point is there are circumstances (e.g. pointing a gun at someone) where speech can turn into a crime. It's not just speech, but nevertheless the speech is criminal. — Echarmion
No, it isn't. The whole thing is, which doesn't even require speech. — Terrapin Station
Insults also don't necessarily require speech. Yet if insulting someone was a crime, it would make certain speech acts (like calling someone an Idiot) criminal. — Echarmion
It would depend on what the person's "criminal insult" criteria would be. We'd have to ask them. Maybe they'd have detailed criteria, most of which don't have anything to do with speech, and where speech wouldn't even be necessary. — Terrapin Station
Why would it depend on that? I don't see the logic here. — Echarmion
So would you say that walking was a criminal act, because it was a constituent element of a guy walking into a bank, robbing it, then walking away? — DingoJones
Because it's going to be someone's opinion of just what is problematic or not, just what should be illegal or not, etc. What one individual would call "criminal insults" might have little to do with what someone else would consider "criminal insults," and someone might have criteria for what they're naming "criminal insults" that doesn't have anything whatsoever to do with speech. Which would mean they'd be using the term very unusually, probably, but people can do that. — Terrapin Station
The whole idea is that I wouldn't have "criminal threatening" where you can just intuit what I'd consider a problem. That's the whole reason for the detailed list of criteria I gave. That whole thing is what I have in mind, which each part of it a necessary component. — Terrapin Station
Ok then, let's say that a criminal insult is defined as speech or another communicative act that demeans the person addressed or identified as the target of the act. Where demeans would have another definition which doesn't need to concern us.
This law would limit speech, make some speech acts criminal, correct? — Echarmion
??? No, obviously not. If the person isn't even referring to speech, how would it make any speech acts criminal? — Terrapin Station
So calling someone an "asshole" would not be a criminal speech act (we'll assume it's demeaning)? — Echarmion
No, by constituent element I mean something that is part of the actual elements of the offense. Most definitions of robbery are not concerned with your mode of locomotion. — Echarmion
Not if someone is defining "criminal insult" so that it has nothing to do with speech. — Terrapin Station
Well you are just defining speech as a constituent element. Its no more constituent than the walking. — DingoJones
Thats my point, the logic is the same so you aren’t being consistent when you include one and not the other. — DingoJones
That's, frankly, absurd. The act is a) criminal and b) a speech act. According to your logic, the vast majority of laws concerning insults and hate speech aren't actually about speech. So I guess the free speech utopia is already here. — Echarmion
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