Well, people can have really intense fears of trees, and that fear is probably going to be persistent, but what needs to be worked on there is what's going on with the person psychologically. The aim is to try to alleviate if not cure what's seen as an irrational reaction. — Terrapin Station
Yes, this would be a straw man. Because some people overreact all mean acts are exempt? — schopenhauer1
You suggested intensity and persistence as criteria. — Terrapin Station
So are you bringing up epistemic arguments that since there is no arbiter of how intense or persistent the mean person is actually being, it becomes useless to try to figure it out? — schopenhauer1
No. I was saying that there are fears that are intense and persistent but not rational, so we try to fix the fact that people have them rather than moderating the external stuff that triggered the fear. — Terrapin Station
Again, "mean" here is more about intensity, context, duration, intent, etc. — schopenhauer1
when the problem lies with seeing the behavior as mean. — Terrapin Station
Again, trying to be mean to someone isn't the "fault" of the person its targeted to. There can be mutually exclusive things going on a) the aggressor is wrong for being mean b) the target should try to grow a thick skin. — schopenhauer1
Why is the aggressor wrong for being mean if no one should be upset at what the aggressor is doing? — Terrapin Station
Intent — schopenhauer1
Rather, a more reasonable line of thinking is people from an early age should be taught to take any mean action with a grain of salt, ignore, get away, keep in mind what NOT to do, etc. However, the mean person is at fault here for trying to inflict some sort of pain on someone. They don't get a pass just because people should be taught to ignore mean people as much as possible. As I was saying, it depends on several things, so it is a situation by situation thing- things like intent, duration, intensity, context, place, etc. Also, as I stated, not everything is as easy as "Target can move away from Aggressor". Life isn't that simple sometimes. — schopenhauer1
I also said that I think that sometimes negative feelings in response to speech are a problem with the person with the negative feelings, not a problem with the person who said whatever they did to cause the negative feelings — Terrapin Station
IOW above you say sometimes the problem rests with the listener, implying strongly that sometimes it is the sender's problem. — Coben
It's a matter of right epistemic judgment on what is mean. I dont see causing undue pain as necessary. — schopenhauer1
there are fears that are intense and persistent but not rational, so we try to fix the fact that people have them rather than moderating the external stuff that triggered the fear. — Terrapin Station
How can any emotion be rational? — Isaac
I will continue to disagree that the mean person is trying to inflict some sort of pain on someone. — Possibility
But you don’t get to decide whether or not someone else intended to cause harm — Possibility
You have a tendency to read everything "as 'literal' as possible," with no evidenced ability to pick up on contextual clues for semantic nuance. — Terrapin Station
If that isn't an instance of the pot calling the kettle black, I don't know what is. — Echarmion
Marijuana doesn't talk.
Is that what you were looking for? — Terrapin Station
If that wasn't the intent though, why would we call it "mean"? At worst it'd be careless. — Echarmion
Uh, why not? It's a fairly basic feature of human interaction to judge intent. — Echarmion
But it’s more than careless. It’s an intentional withdrawal of kindness, but not intended to cause harm as such. A mean person has no regard for the feelings of others. There’s a difference between this and being intentionally harmful. — Possibility
My argument is that it’s not a ‘right epistemic judgement’ if it’s limited to the victim’s perspective. You need to take into account the ‘mean’ person’s perspective, which includes whether or not they genuinely intended to cause harm. — Possibility
You won’t get accuracy from your own limited judgement - especially if you’re the one who was harmed. — Possibility
Having no regard for the consequences counts as intent in my book. It is, after all, an intentional disregard of the safety of others. — Echarmion
How is that supposed to work, practically? And why are you now qualifying the intent as genuine? What's an example of a non-genuine intent? — Echarmion
Optimally, one should of course take as much evidence into account as possible. But I don't quite see what option I have, when judging the morality of an act, apart from making the judgement myself. At best I can refer the case to the court of popular opinion. — Echarmion
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