No, I don't believe that. — S
I don't know why the other posts were deleted. Anyway, again, yeah, obviously I have unusual views, including unusual ethical views. I've stated this many times. As I said, with my political views, I've yet to run into a single other person who agrees with them overall. — Terrapin Station
What? You don't believe that you'd win the wager? (I'm trying to confirm that that's what you're saying.) — Terrapin Station
Okay, so the wager? — Terrapin Station
I'm not talking metaphorically. If you're sure you'd win, I wouldn't be getting any money from you, right? You'd only be getting money from me. — Terrapin Station
Which means that you're talking shit. — Terrapin Station
There are lots and lots of people who outright refuse to bet their real money from people who goad them to do so online, — S
You put the money in escrow. You draw up a contract specifying the terms. There's zero risk unless you're talking shit. — Terrapin Station
If you put up enough--say at least 10k US, I'll come to Australia or wherever you are (for some reason I was thinking it's Australia) and we can do the study there, so you're present every step of the way. — Terrapin Station
Sure. How much are we wagering? — Terrapin Station
And are you open to a critical examination of the paper and its claims? — Terrapin Station
The paper is basically a summary of the state of psychological and neuroscienetific thinking on the matter. If you're not going to trust the expert judgement (which I've already outlined), then there's nothing much in that paper to go on. This is the problem with your attitude that any expert position can be critically examined. There have been literally thousands of experiments done in this field. You cannot possibly examine them all, nor would you have the background knowledge to do so. Experts in the field examine some of them, other experts collate the conclusions of those experts, other experts summarise all that in conclusions like the one I quoted. Could they all be wrong? Absolutely. Have we got a chance in hell of reasonably demonstrating that they are? No.
If you want to critically examine the experiments which have lead to the conclusions I cited, be my guest. There are 95 citations in that paper alone, and many of those are citing other summaries which themselves have scores of experimental results cited. I'll find a link to the paper, when you've read through the several thousand experiments it collectively cites, I'd love to hear your thoughts on their conclusions. — Isaac
Here's an escrow company I've used:
http://smprtitle.com/services/escrow-services/
Is that okay with you? — Terrapin Station
This is a very difficult issue, especially with the “think of the children” rhetoric involved.
I like to think of it this way: if we educated children in the nature of language, and how to better grapple with their feelings when in contact with abusive words, they will learn to negate the bully’s attempts to exert power and coercion through verbal abuse. — NOS4A2
I'm telling you what I'd do. What do you want instead--tell you what someone else would do?
I'm okay with "child abuse" when it's only psychological, sure.
With you not being okay with it and wanting to prohibit it, can you answer the question I asked: how would you enforce any laws against psychological abuse? How would you establish that there has even been psychological abuse against kids? — Terrapin Station
First off, I explicitly asked you to reply given the nature of reality where you're not king. I again get a reply "I'm telling you what I'd do" but that's just made-up nonsense if it's not grounded in reality. You keep on doing this and are effectively not answering my questions at all as a result. — Benkei
No, I'm asking you, given the reality that psychological child abuse exists what you're going to do about that sort of abuse if your position is that the speech acts of the parents, which cause such harm, is entirely legal because it cannot be limited in any way. It seems you're not going to do anything about it and just accept child abuse, because you're ok with it. — Benkei
So basically what you seem to be saying is that "if the world worked totally differently I'd be in favour of free speech absolutism". — Benkei
Yes, wishful thinking isn't addressing the point. I don't think there's much to talk about if you don't believe protecting children from psychological abuse is more important than parents' rights to abuse their children. — Benkei
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