Yet by your logic the fact they're incapable of giving consent means that cannot be any part of the story about why it is wrong. — Bartricks
That's question begging — Bartricks
ake procreation acts themselves - would it notake be better if they could be consented to? — Bartricks
What is it about the boundaries of objects that is real according to you? I mean you say that what is real about the boundaries of objects is not at all conceptual, which I take you to mean is not mental. — Janus
Granting that a boundary is not something we merely think, it must be something we see or feel. — Janus
What are your principles for deciding what amount of control is sufficient for ethical or legal considerations? — Echarmion
Since you're non-responsive on the point, may I take it that you agree that, while speech alone by itself cannot lift a stone, that that same speech may be deployed to persuade - and persuade - a human agent to lift the stone, and be intended to accomplish that exact result?
Or a different example: either of a policeman or an armed robber tells you to raise your hands; aren't you inclined, as a result of that speech act, to raise your hands? — tim wood
If evolution is true then why aren't new life-forms popping into existence? — TheMadFool
It was claimed that it cannot be wrong to impose life here on someone without their prior consent due to the impossibility of getting it. — Bartricks
The OP made things disappear simply on the basis of disagreeing. This isn't possible I believe. If we disagreed on matters of taste, which I presume is subjective, that would be different. Borders I hope are objective and disagreeing on it wouldn't make it magically vanish. — TheMadFool
So, contrary to what you've claimed it IS wrong, other things being equal, to impose something significant on someone else without their prior consent (and especially wrong when it involves risks of significant harms). — Bartricks
Islamic law does not allow for liberally inventing new extensions. Read the page on Sharia. The consensus of religious scholars will never defend the view that politicians would have the authority to extend Islamic law. That is unthinkable. — alcontali
What to think of people who believe that politicians are allowed to invent and enforce any new law to their liking? — alcontali
If hate speech is accepted using freedom of speech, then you've licensed the groundwork(the means) for war and bloodshed.
Pick an enemy. — creativesoul
An inability to determine the truth of a proposition x doesn't imply that x doesn't have a truth value. We just don't know the truth value. The border exists but we just don't know where it is. — TheMadFool
If only we could make war, racism, and everything bad disappear by disagreeing. — TheMadFool
In a similar matter (no pun intended), there have been a few recent threads on this topic and wanted to get your thoughts on it too.
Can something exist by itself without observation? — 3017amen
For example I'm sure you know there have been some metaphysical theories that posit math having always existed... . — 3017amen
If you say there are no real, as opposed to merely conceptual, boundaries to objects, then it would seem there are no real particulars either, — Janus
Are the boundaries (borders) of objects real, according to you? — Janus
I guarantee that that's not the case. You're arguing against what you hold to be unacceptable thought, belief, and statements all the time here. — creativesoul
Sorry I just saw your reply / contribution and I thank you for that!
Are you referring to more of an epistemic or ontological aspect of observing things? — 3017amen
That's implicit in saying that this or that interpretation is right or wrong. — S
In another sleight of hand, some have applied the harm principle to speech, and based on this have evoked the paradox of tolerance in order to defend censorship. — NOS4A2
No, exceptions include explaining how language works. — S
It's irrelevant when it commits the fallacy of appealing to the masses and not otherwise. The exceptions have been explained to you. — S