What? — NOS4A2
Even if you’ve never spoken hate speech you might get arrested for it. — NOS4A2
I've read some logic and the video gets along well with what standard textbooks say:
1. A sound deductive argument is one in which the conclusion follows necessarily from the premises. — TheMadFool
What I have learned from philosophy is that most people (includes myself) live in a 'consensus reality'. Nobody really knows what anything is, but they get queues from their culture and society as to how to behave and what to think, and this comprises their reality. Learning to see through that is the main task of philosophy. — Wayfarer
Here is where you are off the mark. Neutrality (no badness here) of a devoid life matters not to no one. — schopenhauer1
Yes — schopenhauer1
Other things matter = agendas for people to follow. — schopenhauer1
But we also went over how if no one is actually alive, preventing joy is neither good nor bad. — schopenhauer1
Forced to do all the things life entails when one is a functioning human in an enculturated setting. And yes, you know I will say that forcing someone to play and then saying that your only way out is violently ending your physical being is not right. I would also mention the starting and continuing comparison. — schopenhauer1
And having kids isn't a messiah complex? Oh, the "mission" to bring happy people into the world following the agendas of this or that. Procreation is force recruiting. At least antinatalists just try to convince. — schopenhauer1
So that's what "S" stands for! — Artemis
It only matters to prevent suffering. — schopenhauer1
All the people alive who report that they experience something "good" doesn't take away the logic of the asymmetry prior to birth. — schopenhauer1
The one time all harm is prevented is all the matters. — schopenhauer1
Anything else is forcing an agenda so another lives it out. — schopenhauer1
No, you are mischaracterizing the argument. What I mean is once born, that person is forced. Prior to this, no one is forced. — schopenhauer1
S, how old are you????? — uncanni
Welp, same repetitive underwhelming response I expected. — Swan
I think the hostility is tragic. — uncanni
I posit that there are no meaningful distinctions between "hate" and "disgust" via your usage of the words (and the cultural usage of the words); and the attempt to make it seem so is "novel" just for that fact alone. — Swan
What a jerk. — DingoJones
Confusing "disgust" and "hatred" is a common thing; doesn't require a "novel" answer, and pretty sure none of my answers have been "novel". — Swan
But since you're the one trying to add complexity to where there isn't any, it's quite evident you're projecting on my answers.
Whatever floats your boat, bud. — Swan
It's the same situation as staring at a mirror on the wall and asking over and over, who is the most brilliant of all. It's pointless. — uncanni
Yeah, sorry. Some people genuinely have other things to do than feel intense hatred for foreign objects, TV shows and random people they don't even know. If you seriously hate television I suggest getting some therapy; it's only a matter of time before a heart attack via stress takes you, and to be honest, it's not worth it going out over a TV show. — Swan
That’s untrue. You’re committing the fallacies, the straw men, the guilt by associations (we’re terrorists now?). — NOS4A2
Yes, you’re pretty good at editing your posts after being called out on it. — NOS4A2
I guess it’s a shame you’re horrible at it. Poisoning the well occurs before you make an argument, not long after. — NOS4A2
Laughter can be an involuntary response. — DingoJones
Well we’ve just been over it haven't we? Am I remembering wrong? — DingoJones
Are you in favour of a speed limit of 50km, or whatever the speed limit is where you live? — DingoJones
No Im not for ACTS of terrorism. — DingoJones
It's laughable that speech could force actions? I'd agree with that.
Or you think it's laughable to only ban speech that would force actions? — Terrapin Station
None of that would matter prior to birth. — schopenhauer1