Okay let's take it to the next level how would you defend that in the face of your children watching TV when the president of the United States wears a sexually-charged t-shirt at a public speaking event. Tell me how you would defend that.
So are you conceding that the astronomer's sexually charged t-shirt was inappropriate for the venue?
I will discuss the second part of the topic no problem. But the first part I'm confused with your logic.
On the one hand you're saying you would not endorse a president wearing a sexually-charged t-shirt at all his/hee public speaking events. And so you would, in our analogy, go ahead and tell your children that it would be inappropriate for the president to do so.
On the other hand you're not willing to concede to the inappropriateness of the astronomer's sexually-charged t-shirt.
Did I get that right,?
(Again we're talking about what is appropriate for the venue. )
wouldn’t tell them it was inappropriate. I wouldn’t tell them this because 1) I am not prim and wish not to I promote that behavior to anyone, and 2) I think there are better ways to go about it. We can simply tell them what they should wear, what people expect them to wear, and why they should do so, for example. — NOS4A2
Talk about thread-drift. I don't like the expression "quantum supremacy" because it implies no further scientific progress is likely in computing. Not because of PC, which I endured for years at the college level. How did this devolve into muscle-shirts? :brow:
How do you square that circle and make it objectively true that all public officials should wear sexually-charged t-shirts during public speaking engagements?
Yep. It's not politically correct to do so. It's common sense.
Would you like me to repost my justification? Otherwise you have not provided any justification for it being appropriate and suitable or proper for the circumstances.
I'm waiting....
So if you're trying to argue a paradigm shift then make your case?
Provide supporting data relative to employment job descriptions, dress codes, analogous social norms and customs snd the like.
Did I miss something or have you provided that somewhere?
Exactly.Talk about thread-drift. — John Gill
In my view comments about a shirt as an example of the effect of political correctness on science is itself dumbing down the issue. It's as far fetched as the tweets saying that the shirt shows how hostile STEM field is towards women.Perhaps it’s not high-brow enough for you. But I think that because it dumbs down public discourse is one of the reasons it should be opposed. I was only trying to give some examples. - What I’m trying to argue is that we should resist the pressure on science to conform to a limited, ever-changing and infantilizing lexicon of speech, in this case the lexicon of the politically correct. I’ve already given examples and shared the concurring arguments of others to give force to the argument. — NOS4A2
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