This is the issue. If a proposition conforms to independent reality how? Is it structurally similar? — Terrapin Station
The real question is, will a gun make me, cause me to be, safer? And the answer to the question is no. No, period. — tim wood
But therein lies the truth: guns often prove to be a cure much, much worse than any problem they're supposed to solve. . — tim wood
So meanings, concepts, mental imagery can somehow exist or amount to something outside of a person's mind on your view? — Terrapin Station
(Otherwise, how are such things matching something else independent of thinking about it and making a judgment about whether they match? (and if they're only mental, how is someone (or something?) seeing your mental content to check if it matches (and if something, how is it doing this?)) — Terrapin Station
So the only way it can be true when you judge it to be false is that it's true to someone else (or to you at a later time). Otherwise, it's not true when you judge it to be false. — Terrapin Station
The way it obtains is via a judgment about whether the meaning "matches" the fact. — Terrapin Station
Correspondence isn't.
— creativesoul
How do you believe the relation obtains outside of a judgment? — Terrapin Station
The statement is an appeal to fear and hatred: side with those who support ‘the possibility of armed citizens’, OR be associated with Palestinian suicide bombers, Taliban and anyone who kidnaps women for rape and sex-slave trade. This isn’t feminism. It’s a false dichotomy. — Possibility
We don't perceive pain and pleasure. We interpret certain sensory information as painful or pleasurable. — T Clark
You cannot be serious. — Possibility
AFA is NOT a feminist group. It is a group of women who support the right to carry guns. There’s a difference. — Possibility
Those who push for gun control are of the same mind-set as Palestinian suicide bombers and the Taliban who kidnap women for rape and sex-slave trade. Both don’t like the possibility of armed citizens, in these cases, especially an armed woman.
As for the argument regarding gender equality, to suggest that feminists should be supporting the right to carry a weapon because it gives women a more ‘equal’ ability to defend themselves that wouldn’t be there without the gun is beyond ridiculous — Possibility
and attempts to direct the focus away from genuine feminist issues - such as the use of broad gender statistics which perpetuate the assumption that women are ‘generally’ less capable than men. — Possibility
As a woman, if I believe I need a gun to feel safe, then there is something fundamentally askew - and it’s NOT with the world - it’s either with how I interact with the world, or how I think the world sees me. — Possibility
So a gun owner could choose between surrendering his weapons to the authorities, keeping them in defiance of the law (and identifying as a criminal), or unloading them on the black market, perhaps for a tidy profit. One can imagine a flood of weapons in the hands of violent criminals and organised crime syndicates, and a shrinking window of opportunity to get away with activities such as armed robberies before the full force of the new laws came into effect. — Possibility
Brazil and Russia, both countries with far tougher gun laws than the USA, have murder rates four times higher than America.
If you look on the web, there seem to have been a bunch of studies, the results of which seem to be pretty inconclusive. That's for the US. It is my understanding that gun ownership in the US is really different than the UK. Many more people here own guns and it's relatively easy to get them. Is that also true for Australia? — T Clark
The problem with such figures is that they don't account for other differences in the areas that they are looking at, such as population density. The places with the strictest gun laws are ususally cities, which have higher crime rates across the board. — Echarmion
The vast majority of people behaves "well" insofar as most people respect the law to a wide extend. However, the more guns that are around, the easier those guns end up on the black market. In countries with strict gun laws, acquiring a gun is highly risky, because very few people have access to guns and therefore the avenues are easier to police. — Echarmion
Brazil and Russia, both countries with far tougher gun laws than the USA, have murder rates four times higher than America.
But I think that one of the most important factors, and one that is often overlooked, is culture. In an european country, where guns are rarely seen outside the hands of the police, people simply do not tend to think of a gun as an option or a solution. Getting a gun (either legally or illegally) requires planning and effort, and this alone provides some amount of protection. — Echarmion
In the USA, so-called ‘hot’ burglaries, committed while the victim is in the house, comprised 13 per cent of the total. In England and Wales they accounted for about 50 per cent of the total.
Generally, concealed carry is much more heavily regulated than open carry. So, the law doesn't agree with your assessment. Many places in the US allow open carry while most require a permit which may be difficult to obtain for concealed carry. — T Clark
I am very skeptical of these statistics. If you look at the data, it is very ambiguous whether or not gun ownership has an effect on violent crime. — T Clark
...armed robberies rose by 73 per cent, unarmed robberies by 28 per cent, assaults by 17 per cent and kidnapping by 38 per cent. Murder did fall by 9 per cent, but manslaughter increased by 32 per cent.
Violent crimes are 81 percent higher in states without non-discretionary laws. For murder, states that ban the concealed carrying of guns have murder rates 127 percent higher than states with the most liberal concealed-carry laws.
In the period 1987 to 1996, Florida issued 380,000 concealed-carry licenses and revoked seventy-two because of crimes committed by the permit holder. Most of these crimes did not involve the use of the permitted gun.
. Neither is bounded by its own individual space.
— AJJ
What does this phrase refer to? What would that amount to, to be "bounded by its own individual space"? — Terrapin Station
Are you suggesting that you or anyone else is presenting arguments or observations? Just curious. — Terrapin Station
You've got to be joking. You observe "unified space"? Can you point to what you're looking at? — Terrapin Station
Explain how you're observing that "here and there are parts of space," please. — Terrapin Station
Again, as I wrote, "They are locations, and locations are always defined in terms of relative extensional relations."
So, for example, the Earth is located between the orbits or Venus and Mars. — Terrapin Station
It would make no sense to say that locations have no location, right? — Terrapin Station
The universe has no location in time or space.
— frank
Sure it does. It is all locations of time and space. — Terrapin Station
On correspondence theory, "The cat is on the mat" (a proposition, which we're denoting by putting it in quotation marks) matches the cat being on the mat (the state of affairs that the cat is on the mat).
But I'll work with it for a moment. "If that state of affairs is actual" per what? What's making the determination if something described is actual? That's the question here. Let's detail how the determination is made, because that's the matching. — Terrapin Station