I don't. Fiction exists in the usual way, but "fictional" is rather a kind of nonexistence. — unenlightened
Do ideas think, or isnt it that ideas are the result of thinking? — Harry Hindu
"Fictional" is a kind of existence, so Harry Potter exists, but as a fictional character. Harry Potter is real in that it exists, but the nature of its existence is as a fictional character in a book, not as an actual human being. — Harry Hindu
And this is supposed to show that he knows that he exist without absolute certainty. — Purple Pond
However, how can you be absolutely certain your not also a fictional character? — Purple Pond
You are claiming that Moore is a racist while asking if she is.
Pick a lane. — Valentinus
After the presumptions you make, the "questions" are merely rhetorical. — Valentinus
I understand your confusion and I do apologize, what I ment by original form is that we spent most of the time of the universe not being here, we were technically "not being", in the same way that it is impossible for a being to remember the moments before they were born we will not 'remeber' the time as dead, because it is simply not a experience — Filipe
Furthermore, banning 'hate speech' will only confirm their ideas about how society is rigged against them. — Tzeentch
once that we cease our existing life we simple go back to our original form of "not being" — Filipe
Premises:
The original poster and the followers picked the statements of the most vulnerable people to criticize.
This whole discussion provides for exactly what the so called social justice warriors are saying.
The fact that these arguments are wide-spread damages our society and makes it hard to treat all people fairly.
Conclusions
The fact that Czahar, his cohort, and much of the rest of society fail to see the corruptness of the framing of the question says much of what needs to be said about race. — T Clark
The George Pell case shows the issue neatly. A well protected established white male against childhood recollections.
The issue is not that lived experience is beyond criticism, but that it must not be simply dismissed out of hand. — Banno
I called it a fallacy in its normal English language usage. — T Clark
I was agreeing with Unenlightened and I backed up my agreement with arguments. — T Clark
Yes. This and your original post on this thread are exactly right. It's amazing to me that you are the only one who understands how it works. You pointed out the biggest fallacy of the other posts and of racial discussions in general, one that's hard to counter - Why did the original poster and the followers pick the statements of the most vulnerable people to criticize. It is a sign of their, of society's, lack of social and psychological awareness and moral courage.
Self-serving whining by the privileged against the whining of the vulnerable would be funny if it weren't so destructive. I appreciate your responses. — T Clark
As I said in my response to unenlightened's posts, and as he said, this whole discussion is wonderful, compelling evidence for exactly what the so called social justice warriors, whom you deride, are saying. Calling it ironic is inadequate. It's stomach-churning. And stating you are a Social Democrat as some sort of credential is smarmy. Thanks for the opportunity to use that word. — T Clark
Thanks unenlightened. I was siding with the OP, but I had missed this point — ZhouBoTong
You pointed out the biggest fallacy of the other posts and of racial discussions in general, one that's hard to counter - Why did the original poster and the followers pick the statements of the most vulnerable people to criticize. — T Clark
And stating you are a Social Democrat as some sort of credential is smarmy. Thanks for the opportunity to use that word — T Clark
Yeah, I'm not in the business of convincing you, so I'm happy to leave everything here, and let the jury of readers reach their own judgement. — unenlightened
There's a level of courtesy and generosity in giving people the benefit of the doubt but the left uses this generosity to levy heavy criticism towards groups, systems and the like which isn't really appropriate. — Judaka
You could have provided examples of questionable whites and males, but you did not. And that is is evidence that is not a matter of opinion but can be checked by anyone who cares to took at your op. Evidence that contradicts your claims of fair-mindedness. — unenlightened
I am doing what you claim is the right thing and questioning your claims in the light of the evidence, — unenlightened
and finding them unsupported, — unenlightened
It's not like there's a great shortage of white men full of shit to question. — unenlightened
Yup. You want to question that? — unenlightened
↪czahar Analogies are not evidence. — unenlightened
Thing is, the complaints you guys are complaining about, the testimonies that you are allegedly legitimately criticising are those of folks such as women and black people whose testimony is historically regarded as questionable, and there is a huge and long history that a part of low status is nearly always that the testimony is also given a low status. And that this is the testimony that you both bring into question yourselves is the corroboration that you demand that this is a continuing problem and the complaints are true. You yourselves are the proof of the validity of the experience. — unenlightened
And provide evidence of this too. — unenlightened
For the most part (I'll avoid detailing this for robots at the moment) my view is that persons' "lived experience" should be above criticism. — Terrapin Station
In a court of law, first hand accounts are evidence. Now I doubt that many would say that such evidence is proof, because folks can lie or be mistaken. But the complaint is precisely that the evidence is dismissed without evidence to the contrary, and the evidence of testimony is discounted on one side and counted on the other. — unenlightened
One of the legal limitations of free speech (according to the 1st amendment) is speech that incite actions that would harm others (such as yelling fire in a crowded theater. — Anaxagoras
The two are interrelated, but the idea is that in the afterlife you will be different from what you are now. Just from this point, we can already suppose that in our fallen state (again, traditional Christianity places significant emphasis on human sinfulness) we have neither moral nor epistemic grounds to properly understand the kind of wants we will have in the afterlife. In other words, on the Christian worldview, our present nature limits our capacity to even conceive of the "heavenly" ourselves. Hence, our reasons for desiring afterlife cannot be grounded in our analyses of human nature and the world the way we know them. — Gortar
It's wrong to reward people for any achievement, luck or effort. The only reason cited for the lack of justification for rewarding luck is that it would be 'unfair'. This implies that those who have worked hard to achieve some personal goal are rewarded 'fairly'. In what way would bestowing an award on someone who has achieved high grades through their own hard work be 'fair'. They may be motivated entirely by their own self-interest, studying only to become as wealthy as possible for their own self-indulgence. So what could possibly be the function of such a reward that would qualify for our normal use of the term 'fair'? — Pseudonym
Among other things, there are not racial roles, but there definitely are gender roles. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I think that we can only make moral judgements on violence in hindsight. Violence is only moral if it is preventing something even worse, but we cannot know for certain how things will work out until the future comes. — JustSomeGuy
So the question is what is the use of free will when we, rational agents, can always choose the best option? — bahman
Is she pregnant or not? What test was used? What was its accuracy? Will she carry to term? What was the purpose of the question about pregnancy and who was asking it, and who were they addressing? All these contextual things and many more go into any supposedly simple black and white yes or no question. — Joshs
They are a part of what the answer means.
Much more important than a yes or no to a question, is the significance of the distinction. What will happen as a consequence of the answer is a function of all the superordinate meanings and commitments, personal, social, cultural, that are tied up with it. Gay vs straight vs trams matters in a way that penis vs vagina do not, because they refer to deeper issues of meaning distinctions involving whole ways of behaving and societal reaction to them.
language that posits irreducible distinctions ( man vs woman, etc) is a kind of violent language. To verbalize, and believe in, sharp distinctions is to see alternate views as violating those irreducible distinctions, and justifying a response that counteracts that presumed violation. — Joshs
Translation : Violence is the use of force or power, physical or psychological, to impose constraints, dominate, kill, destroy or damage. — Akanthinos
People like to be called by the thing they like to self identify by. Anything else is violence. — charleton
You have to understand the degree of danger. In the U.S, a trans person is 14 times more likely to be murdered than a non-trans person. There have been wars which were less dangerous to soldiers. So, given the situation, I feel it's okay if we use a very dramatic language, because it is a very dramatic situation. — Akanthinos
No, but it'd be rude. — Buxtebuddha
But as I noted earlier, the Nazis were the legitimate government of Germany and had broad popular support for their deeply immoral activities. Legality does not necessarily impart legitimacy. — fishfry
If your only argument for the legitimacy of government violence is that they're the government, that's refuted by the many examples of the immoral acts of governments throughout history
If one steps back and takes a moral view, violence from a street gang and from the State is indistinguishable. One need only read about the many police abuses of citizens in the US and elsewhere to understand that point. — fishfry