No I’m not. You were triggered that I defended the free speech of Nazis, and said I should be ashamed. Then I showed how civil rights activists do the same. I’d love to watch you tell the head of the ACLU that he should be ashamed of himself for defending the free speech of Nazis. — NOS4A2
Are you defending the Nazis and their vile and condemnable hate speech?
— S
That’s one of the perils of defending free speech: you have to defend it for everyone. — NOS4A2
What is Jeremy Corbyn's current condition for agreeing a general election? — Galuchat
“The bill that is going to parliament today needs to pass. It needs to pass all its stages. It needs to go through and have royal assent – and once we’re confident they can’t crash out and no deal is taken off the table for 31 October, we will support a general election,” he said. — Corbyn's spokesperson
That's not true at all. — schopenhauer1
With anything less than force a la physical causality, the person could have decided to do something different.
— Terrapin Station
Right. But that leaves only physically manipulating someone's limbs. Not a very common scenario in practice. — Echarmion
Nazis were persecuted for their speech... — NOS4A2
Breathe out, breathe in. A bad habit brought me back now which is the same one that had driven me away then: breathing ... — 180 Proof
Yeah I'm not putting the other premises in there. I think you can fill those in..and if you can..you know where the argument was going in the first place and this objection is an exercise in objecting. — schopenhauer1
Yes, the same Lib Dems who opposed Labour's war in Iraq. — Michael
I don’t see how a deal is the only way to go, especially if that deal is no good. May’s deal, for instance, was deemed a bad deal. Rather, It would be shooting oneself in the foot to accept a bad deal. The no-deal needs to remain on the table as another option. — NOS4A2
I don't see how it doesn't. — schopenhauer1
Being a category error is irrelevant. — schopenhauer1
The logic follows if you use the term "impossible".
If it is impossible to get consent and a future action leads to unknown suffering that affects an actual person, then do not procreate that person who will be affected by being born and who will experience unknown suffering. — schopenhauer1
All Bartricks is saying is that you CAN'T give consent prior to birth. Birth causes unknown suffering. Ergo, DON'T give birth since consent is impossible. He is saying the default decision in this case should be no birth. — schopenhauer1
A small child is incapable of giving consent, but it is still wrong to do things to that child that will affect it for the rest of its life — Bartricks
and wrong in no small part BECASUE it has not consented to them. — Bartricks
so, just to be clear, you are denying that the fact a person will be seriously affected by an act and cannot consent to it is NOT a moral negative most of the time? Because that is just absurd.
It clearly IS a moral negative most of the time. For instance whenever we have - for other moral reasons - to impose something on someone without their prior consent it is almost invariably regrettable. That is, it would have been better if somehow, per impossible, we could have got it.
Take procreation acts themselves - would it notake be better if they could be consented to? — Bartricks
no, it is default wrong to coerce someone - and default wrong to deceive someone - because the nature of the act is such that it cannot be consented to (as Kanot pointed out ). Perhaps that's the wrong analysis but it'd be absurd to deny it's plausibility. And thats also the nature of procreation acts, so they are default wrong too, or at least it is extremely plausible that they are. — Bartricks
I was pointing out that there are lots of acts of where the nature of the act in qustion is such as to make consent impossible. Such acts are still clearly default wrong and default wrong due to the fact the other person does not consent. — Bartricks
Thus the idea that the impossibility of getting consent somehow makes it okay to go ahead is patently false. — Bartricks
Yet wars don't rise from the existence of hate speech. Hate speech or it's variants can be used in propaganda, yet the idea that hate speech being a reason for wars is silly.
Just look how many places the US has bombed without any hate speech against the people of those countries. — ssu
Why would I, when no one asked me for it. And usually no one asks, for one of two reasons: no one cares enough, or, it’s so much easier to make fun of the writer, then to query for an understanding of the written. — Mww
I would love to hear some predictions about what will happen, particularly (but not exclusively) from UK residents. Not what you want to happen, but what you actually think will happen both short term and long term. — Relativist
I don't see how Brexit can happen on 31 Oct, though. No-deal is about to become banned by law, May's deal was voted down three times, and Johnson doesn't look like having anything like an alternative proposal. — Wayfarer
I meant the British in general. — NOS4A2
Could you edit in a link to the context. And it did make me laugh and my eyelids got heavy reading it. — Coben
A suggestion: turn the thread into case studies. While reading other threads come back with what you consider obfuscatory language in a quote, plus a link so we can see the context. I doubt we will all agree, but I think specifics will tease out at least the different criteria. And we can actually test out the critieria.
One criterion seems to be: there is a simpler way to say it. We can see if the examples pass this test. For example. — Coben
On the idea of the correct-ness of concepts:
Concepts are nothing but half a relational proposition, from which a cognition becomes possible, the other half herein being beyond the scope. Whether or not a concept relates to its object is the purview of judgement. It follows that any error in cognition, or even if a cognition can be given, is the fault of judgement, and has nothing to do with whether or not the concept in use is correct in itself, but only has to do with whether or not it is itself the correct concept to use. — Mww