I think you're saying that those of us who support some restrictions on speech are basing this on false beliefs about the effects of the speech. Is that correct?There is no argument for censorship save for superstition and magical thinking. — NOS4A2
I’ve already stated my reasoning. The effects cannot be shown to reach as far as you say they do. The objects, structures, and energies responsible for such movements, responses, and actions are not the same as the ones you claim they are. There is no argument for censorship save for superstition and magical thinking. — NOS4A2
No, I'm a compatibilist.
Your position, though, is unclear. You're a free will libertarian but also an eliminative materialist. I assume, then, that you believe that libertarian free will is made possible by quantum indeterminancy? So we "could have done otherwise" only because the applicable human behaviour operates according to probabilistic causation rather than determinism?
And the infrared sensor sends electrical signals to some other part of the TV. But it's still the case that I cause the TV to turn on by pushing the appropriate button on the remote. Your reasoning is a non sequitur, even despite your assertions that humans, unlike TVs, have "agency" – because this "agency" does not factor into the behaviour of our sense organs in response to stimulation, e.g. I can't just will myself to be deaf (even if I can will myself to cover my ears).
I think you're saying that those of us who support some restrictions on speech are basing this on false beliefs about the effects of the speech. Is that correct?
And if so, do you agree this is the pivotal issue? Can you please attempt to state exactly what false beliefs we hold, in objective terms, rather than with judgemental terms?
Also state your position on free will. Do you believe humans possess libertarian free will? Reading some of your exchange with @Michael, this seems relevant.
words possess some sort of power or force over and above their medium. — NOS4A2
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
And if they changed the laws tomorrow you would dutifully follow it, given that the words cause your actions. — NOS4A2
once you limit free speech it is no longer free speech. It’s censorship — NOS4A2
How can a law possibly limit free speech? A law is just speech from the government. You said speech can’t cause anything so it can’t limit anything.
See? You can’t say that in this discussion.
You have to make your point some other way or just concede you are not making sense saying words don’t cause actions. Right?
Do you believe laws cause your actions? — NOS4A2
I’ve already conceded that the environment stimulates our sense organs, simply due to the fact that they collide, and have factored it in. But that’s where their influence ends. in the case of hearing or reading, the words do not exert enough force on the body to move it in the way you say it does. It has neither the mass nor the energy to do so. All the energy and systems required to move the body comes from the body. That’s why hearing and reading are capacities of the body, and not soundwaves. That’s why I say words cannot determine, govern, or control our responses. — NOS4A2
What I believe is that each of us are the source of our own actions — NOS4A2
Accounts of libertarianism subdivide into non-physical theories and physical or naturalistic theories. Non-physical theories hold that the events in the brain that lead to the performance of actions do not have an entirely physical explanation, and consequently the world is not closed under physics. Such interactionist dualists believe that some non-physical mind, will, or soul overrides physical causality.
Explanations of libertarianism that do not involve dispensing with physicalism require physical indeterminism, such as probabilistic subatomic particle behavior.
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In non-physical theories of free will, agents are assumed to have power to intervene in the physical world, a view known as agent causation.
agents are assumed to have power to intervene in the physical world
His position that words cannot cause actions in others defeats his position that laws cannot limit and must protect freedom of speech. — Fire Ologist
And this is a misguided understanding of causation, as I have been at pains to explain. I cause the distant bomb to explode by pushing a button on my phone. Your reasoning is a non sequitur when applied to machines and a non sequitur when applied to biological organisms.
Causal influence doesn't simply end after the immediate transfer of kinetic energy.
Which is a very vague claim. As it stands it's consistent with compatibilism and so consistent with determinism.
Yet you said before that you endorse agent-causal libertarian free will, but that is inconsistent with eliminative materialism. From here:
Libertarian free will implies a person chooses which actions he will take. These choices will be made based on his beliefs and his passions. There are both positive and negative passions. A positive passion will tend to influence our choices in positive ways (e.g. acts of charity). A negative passion will tend to influence our choices toward negative behaviors (e.g. hurting others).
When we hear or read words spoken by others, our passions can be evoked. This can lead to negative behaviors. It's true that the perpetator is morally accountable for his actions, but it's also true that the conveyor of the evocative language is a contributing factor or cause. I previously discussed contributing causes with you here.
This is the issue we are confronting, from my perspective. Tell me which portions you disagree with.
The evocation occurs in the listener, as his brain interprets the words.So the question is “what does or does not ‘evoke’ the passions?”, the words or you? — NOS4A2
Words such as "torture" or "freedom" carry with them something more than a simple description of a concept or an action.They have a "magnetic" effect, an imperative force, a tendency to influence the interlocutor's decisions.They are strictly bound to moral values leading to value judgements and potentially triggering specific emotions. For this reason, they have an emotive dimension. In the modern psychological terminology, we can say that these terms carry "emotional valence", as they presuppose and generate a value judgement that can lead to an emotion
Does the soundwave have some other causal power over-and-above that transfer? — NOS4A2
You keep repeating it, telling me I’m misguided, but i have yet seen any reason why I should believe otherwise. You won’t even mention any other forces, objects, and events “causally influencing” subsequent acts.
Rather, what you leave me to picture is a cause A that causes both B and not-B, and I can’t wrap my brain around it. The joke caused me to laugh and the other guy to not laugh, for example, without admitting the reasons for the different effects, the reasons for B and not-B. I wager that is why you wish to stick to more predictable causal relations like button pushing and explosions, so you don’t have to mention the actual causes of, and reasons for, varying responses, for example if the bomb didn’t explode or if the Venus flytrap didn’t close. — NOS4A2
To my mind there is nothing non-physical about it. — NOS4A2
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