Right, but it's a political level discussion. In most cases when people argue for a political level option in policy, they will argue that Policy A is good becasue it causes X and Y and Policy B or not having policy A is bad because it causes Z and Ä. But for you, given your very strict sense of what can be called a cause, such things are very hard to demonstrate. IOW I was raising the issue of whether it is good or better to have few laws to see if you would justify this in terms of causes and effects. — Coben
We can't say, without making un-agreed upon commitments, that such a situation can exist, hence we must proceed in the absence of such certainty. We have to act despite it. That's what I'm questioning, how we do that. Why presume a genuine free choice can be made when there is zero evidence to support that view? — Isaac
Yes, but we might not know the truth of that fact, hence "appears". — Isaac
your understanding of the meaning that is wrong? — Isaac
No. If they had what appears to be a choice, — Isaac
Decisions are influenced causally by a wide range of factors. — S
Better for people in general? and/or 'is having less laws better in the sense that more laws cause a net gain in worse effects?' — Coben
Who said anything about "didn't have a choice in how they acted", — Isaac
Why, do you think that most experts would not agree? — Isaac
What is odd about causal and influence being conjoined? — Isaac
I'm not about to waste my time linking papers by authorities you fully intend to reject. — Isaac
Then you may be getting less from your reading (watching too?) than others do? — Pattern-chaser
No, I can't be bothered. You know as as I well how such inquiries are carried out. — Pattern-chaser
To believe something is to accept it as true. — Pattern-chaser
That actions are taken free from causal influence from the environment. — Isaac
Psychology deals with observed causes and effects and fits them to hypotheses on the basis of consistency. Neuroscience deals with cause and effect with observed brain activity and fits them to hypotheses on the basis of co-incident behaviours. — Isaac
Just open a standard textbook on the subject. I guarantee you it will assume a causal link between environmental variables (such as the speech of others) and behaviour. — Isaac
We need to apply sociology and statistics to clarify that hate speech often leads to violence. But if we do, the result is clear: hate speech leads to violence often enough to legislate against it. — Pattern-chaser
Of course it's belief. It's acceptance of the story, and the world wherein it takes place, for the duration of that story. This is NOT worth disputing to this degree. It's a side-point of a side-point. Let's leave it here. — Pattern-chaser
You're suggesting that the 'so called' experts are not to be trusted, — Isaac
We are able to show that it is a cause to the satisfaction of almost every expert in the field. — Isaac
I don't 'know' God doesn't exist, in the same way I don't 'know' square circles don't exist. Not because I'm ignorant about the 'existence' of square circles, but because the very idea is stupid to begin with. — StreetlightX
So far you are wonderfully consistent. most people like to be able to say their way is better, not as a preference. — Coben
No, not "stressing". That's what "passive belief" is intended to communicate. Something that happens in the background. Something that makes no significant contribution to the experience, which is the story, in this case. — Pattern-chaser
But it would be very hard to argue, for you I mean, that there is a problem with more laws. — Coben
If you don't know how to 'suspend disbelief' and enjoy a good story, this is not the place to find out about it. — Pattern-chaser
In this context, rather than as a bold and universal (objective? :gasp: ) statement, I would say that passive belief remains in the background, largely ignored — Pattern-chaser
We've just agreed (I thought) that for a thing to be causal it only need to be one cause among others. — Isaac
Why is free speech an important human right, and above the right to life ? — Wittgenstein
It's hard for me to imagine this not leading to a lot more children who much later realize they were traumatized having sex 'willingly'. — Coben
I've thought for a bit of bringing up the issue somewhere implicit in this that you must have a parsimony position on laws. IOW if we can't decide if something is causal, then we don't make a law. We keep laws to a minimum. I say this because it would be hard for you to argue, given your ideas about cause, that for example a hate speech law would cause bad thing to happen.
But then it seems that even arguing in favor of parsimony would normally entail saying it's better that way, and that this would be justified using effects. The negative effects of not being parsimonius. — Coben
That's not my experience. You do get to go up to five over on the highway, but above that, you can be driving just peachy and get pulled over. And I've been pulled over for things that don't affect safety like an outdated registration sticker. Heck, I've been pulled over for not looking right, which may have some correlation with driving poorly, but I wasn't exhibiting the latter. — Coben
So there would have to be some kind of psychological evaluation in cases where children were purported to have given consent to adults? — Coben
Would you allow a speech act which states
" Let's ban free speech " — Wittgenstein
and if it gets implemented, you won't have free speech anymore.
so are you in favor of eliminated speed limits?, perhaps leaving them as recommendations. — Coben
Does this extend to age restrictions? things like the age one can get a driver's licence - or, as I mull it over, getting rid of licences at all, since these are statistical protection - or buy a whisky shot at a bar or give consent to sex. — Coben
