Hence why I'm asking. — Terrapin Station
If it's that you consider any content whatsoever to be an argument, then okay, that makes sense. Again, if someone says "I like Aaron Copland. I'd listen to him every day." Is that an argument in your view?
If so, then at least that makes sense. You consider anything anyone says (at least aside from questions, exclamations, etc. maybe) to be an argument. — Terrapin Station
I know the content you're referring to. — Terrapin Station
What I don't know is what you're considering to be an argument, since I didn't state an argument. Is it that you consider any stance an "argument"? — Terrapin Station
How would someone "justify their suggestion" that they weren't forwarding an argument and that they don't know what one is talking about re the claim that they were?
How would one even begin doing that? — Terrapin Station
If you're simply not going to believe me and insist that I know what you're talking about, there's not much I can do. — Terrapin Station
It's as if you can't comprehend that I'm saying that at least on my view, I didn't forward any sort of argument.
Yet, despite that fact, you think it's "immoral" for me to not tell you what my argument was. lol — Terrapin Station
Maybe I'd agree with you if you could tell me what the argument was. — Terrapin Station
The problem is that I didn't state an argument. I simply stated what my policy would be. What my policy would be isn't an argument for the policy. — Terrapin Station
I couldn't figure out a more sensible way to read it. Hence querying about it. — Terrapin Station
I wouldn't call my stance on free speech a "position in the discussion"... — Terrapin Station
If you're not going to state what the supposed argument is, etc., there's nothing I can do about it. — Terrapin Station
Re the "position comment," if he's just stating that we're going to give opinions, express views, stances, etc. okay, but that would be a weird way to state that, especially in the context of "must be based on whether you think there's a contradiction," which just reads like gibberish to me. — Terrapin Station
I have no idea where you think you showed that. And again, his comment was in the context of someone stating an argument. — Terrapin Station
I didn't state any arguments, a fortiori because I don't even believe there are true or false ethical utterances. — Terrapin Station
No idea why you'd think I'd even have a "position" in a discussion... — Terrapin Station
Your whole position here has not been "really, you think hate speech should be banned, how interesting, tell me more... ", it has from the start been "if you can't show me the exact evidence I count as acceptable, using the rule-making methodology I approve of, you're a moron". I don't mind that approach, I prefer people who have some passion behind their philosophy, but it's disingenuous to paint this 'curious curator of ideas' picture just to support your position here. You're just as passionate about telling everyone what's 'right' as the rest of us. — Isaac
He was saying that assuming widely accepted ethical normatives was useful for having an ethics discussion in a philosophy context. — Terrapin Station
In posts like this, you imply that the right answer hinges on a consensus. But in other posts, you make it clear that if your view isn't the same as the consensus, the consensus is wrong. — Terrapin Station
You did not ask me, S, but if Jesus, Yahweh, or Beelzeboob appeared in front of me and created 100 fish out of nothing instantly in a set of barrels, or turned 100 barrels of wate into wine instantly, then I'd accept it as an act of god, not as an act of magic or trickery. Call me gullible, but it would satisfy me as a proof of truth. And you know how religious I am now. — god must be atheist
Why--because that's what I asked for an example of (because that's what Isaac was talking about). What argument did I give? — Terrapin Station
What this chatter usually assumes however is that all of the accounts in religious texts are likewise projections, illusions or wishful thinking. And surely in a mechanised modern culture such as ours it must seem like that. But I don’t believe so - I think there are records of genuine epiphanies, actual ‘revelations’, such that if anyone were exposed to such visions then they likewise would be compelled to accept their veracity. Not everything in sacred texts is true, but that doesn’t mean that it’s all fallacious, either. Otherwise it would make it the mother of all conspiracies. — Wayfarer
Come on you two, you're embarrassing yourselves. — jamalrob
First, did I even give an "argument" for the stance of mine you're taking to be an example? — Terrapin Station
Hate is, it seems, either silly or foolish. — TheMadFool
Hate grows on inequality. There's an imbalance in the relationship between individuals or groups. Why should the stronger hate the weaker if it's the existence of the weaker that makes them stronger? Why should the weaker hate the stronger if the stronger exist only because they're weaker? — TheMadFool
Because I'm skeptical about what's being claimed. — Terrapin Station
Showing a concrete example of how it would be useful would help convince me. — Terrapin Station
Looking for a concrete example. A fictional one is fine. — Terrapin Station
That's not actually what I said in that part, but I don't want to focus on that. You're not understanding what I'm asking for. I'm asking for an example of an argument someone could give where it's useful (and then explain how it's useful) to assume the likelihood of broad conformity,
Presumably I wouldn't be a good example, because how would it be useful to assume the likelihood of broad conformity in the context of my comments about ethics/morals? — Terrapin Station
If you go Zen on it then some might even be able to use hate to accomplish the good. How could slaves have achieved emancipation if they hadn't hated oppression and if their oppressors hadn't hated treating their fellow human being like animals?
On the other hand we have things like hate crime that are senseless and have far-reaching effects on the collective. — TheMadFool
Do you have a brain? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
What would be a moral argument where it would be useful to assume the likelihood of broad conformity, and then give an example of how the discussion would proceed so that the assumption was useful. If you can give a good example, maybe you'll persuade me. — Terrapin Station
The alternative is that discussions like this get dominated by teasing out the whole web from one oddball, or we don't really have anything to discuss. — Isaac
It focusses on controlling the passions. But our passions are a gift from God... And God doesn't make mistakes. Nature is perfection, so why would God make a fatal flaw in his magnum opus? He did not. — PhilCF
Because to me, it's what you seem to be doing. — Terrapin Station
It's partially because you can't articulate what your actual views are very well, at least in any detail. — Terrapin Station
I'm not going to be able to get why they're so drawn to consensuses, to a point where they think they're correct/incorrect and have normative weight (at least when it suits them (in S's case)), and why they can't see that the latter part of that is fallacious, and they're not going to get why I'm "perversely" denying the normative importance of consensuses. — Terrapin Station
You've made it abundantly clear that you just want to get high on 'freedom' with no regard as to the consequences. — Shamshir
What you seem to be doing is trying to figure out how to interpret normal folks so that per the exact language they happen to use, they don't have any either bollocksed or unanalyzed beliefs. (Although for some reason you don't really seem to do that when it comes to religion.) — Terrapin Station
What would that “something dodgey” be? — NOS4A2