No, you don’t have freedom of expression. — NOS4A2
...and maybe you're really angry at women. — uncanni
Meh, Im not a US hater. Plenty of stupid to go around, US included. Its that pesky human problem, always fucking everything up. — DingoJones
So still a problem in the UK. Maybe both countries should be like something else. — DingoJones
Didnt a comedian go to jail for teaching his dog to do a Nazi salute? Thats the same kinda thing. — DingoJones
Article 19 of the UN human rights code:
“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.”
Is this an example of the UN taking leave of their senses? — NOS4A2
But then you are just not using the word God in its normal sense. Someone who refers to their teapot as God and insists that on their definition the teapot qualifies is simply using a common term with a well understood meaning in a misleading way. — Bartricks
I can't take you seriously at all. — uncanni
God is a state of mind. God is praxis. God is not institutional — uncanni
Rejection of God = human violence/sadism. Absence of God = complete self-engrossment, psychopathic narcissism. Instant gratification at any cost. Because the strongest and most aggressive can. — uncanni
I'm in the process of coming up with a post-patriarchal, post-gendered, kabbalistic/buddhist/pagan/derridian feeling of the oneness, the echad. — uncanni
My favorite French Psychoanalytic Feminist Philosopher Luce Irigaray wrote that women's language must disrupt and confound until men are able to tune into a different frequency and understand. — uncanni
History shows us that the restriction of speech is just too powerful a tool/weapon to cede to the state. — DingoJones
It doesn't matter to me if you disagree; I feel sorry for you that you have the need to be nasty about it. You can try to insult, but it may be that you can't understand a discourse so different from your own. You don't even want to. That is sad to me. — uncanni
Again, people use right/wrong, correct/incorrect with a normative implication. Examples of that abound, and it's inherent in anyone correcting anyone who uses language unusually. We see it with grammar police all the time, for example.
But mere descriptive statements of how language is used among some population have no normative weight at all. — Terrapin Station
Only insofar as making statements about how most people (in some population) use language. — Terrapin Station
I am not trying to be anything: I'm expressing my thoughts and my continuously-transforming understanding. If it makes you uncomfortable or you disapprove, it's fine with me. I'm not seeking your approval of how I think and question. But I have no intention of limiting myself to what you may be familiar with. If you don't want to consider things from a different perspective--if I bore you--you know the drill... — uncanni
It's irrelevant if the crowd thinking something doesn't determine that something is right/correct. — Terrapin Station
So the crowd doesn't determine what's right. — Terrapin Station
When someone doesn't think the crowd is right, appealing to what the crowd thinks isn't going to work, obviously, unless the person simply categorically goes along with the crowd no matter what. If neither of us does that, then appealing to the crowd is irrelevant. — Terrapin Station
Your problem is that you don't think you're wrong just because you go along with the crowd. — Terrapin Station
One thing I don't understand about your views, by the way, is why you wouldn't think that there are correct judgments in ethics and aesthetics. There are certainly consensus opinions. — Terrapin Station
Also why wouldn't you be religious? By far there are more religious believers among humans than agnostics or atheists. — Terrapin Station
We want to fit in with the norm without rocking the boat/without any sort of philosophical questioning, etc.? — Terrapin Station
No, there aren't. — Terrapin Station
There aren't right interpretations. — Terrapin Station
Of course. I would only care about a consensus if (a) I were very or fairly unsure of my own views, and (b) I had good reason to believe that the people I were looking at for a consensus knew what they were talking about/were correct.
Neither (a) nor (b) is the case here. — Terrapin Station
It's a fact that there are no facts re whether something is a benefit, aside from the fact that an individual assesses something to be a benefit. — Terrapin Station
Sure it is. My assessment is what I care about there. Same thing as with the other gym and exercise I do. I'm going by my own goals, my own assessments. — Terrapin Station
One of the primary reasons I come here is to stay in practice thinking about philosophical stuff in an interactive situation and to stay in practice expressing my thoughts in the same context. It also gives me verbal expression exercise more generally. Also, because of the typical sorts of personalities that are attracted to boards like this, it also keeps me in practice re verbally sparring with that type.
So it's a type of "mental gym." — Terrapin Station
Sure. So what would the purpose be of it rhetorically? That was the question. — Terrapin Station
Won't matter to most people. Okay, and what about it? What would the purpose of that be rhetorically? Is it just an exercise in pointing out the obvious, with no aim to persuade, no aim to suggest facts or implications other than what most people think or do? — Terrapin Station
and
What bearing on anything does the fact that most people consider it to have no benefit have? — Terrapin Station
Which has what to do with whether something is a benefit? — Terrapin Station
You know that there aren't any facts as to whether something is a benefit or not, right? — Terrapin Station
Seems pretty vague to me. Lots of things have “direct and indirect” harms. I see “may” cause a few times, I see the claims are not “easy to evidence empirically”.
Still pretty skeptical about the reasons so far presented for your side here...though Im not really all that convinced by the arguments on the other side either. Why ive stuck around reading this long I suppose. — DingoJones
As the previous sections have outlined, there are direct and indirect harms that
might result from hate speech. In terms of the former, hate speech may result in psychological harm or harm to the dignity of members of the targeted groups. In terms of the latter, hate speech may lead to violence or public disorder or to societal discrimination. None of these claims are easy to evidence empirically, but the case for all of them becomes more convincing when taking into account the cumulative effect of multiple instances of hate speech rather than examining each individual instance in isolation. — A Comparative Analysis of Hate Crime Legislation: A Report To The Hate Crime Legislation Review, James Chalmers and Fiona Leverick, University of Glasgow, July 2017