Yes they do. There are a greater proportion of child abusers in the priesthood than there are among farmers, or soldiers, or dentists. Just as there are among schoolteachers, paediatricians etc. Groups that have access to children, particularly where they have some significant authority and are implicitly trusted by parents tend to attract abusers. The priesthood is one such institution. — Pseudonym
Are you trying to say that it doesn't matter what value a person brings to the company? Does just the occupation title matter? — Coldlight
I think this is the point, about whether this 'striking' feeling enables something to be beautiful or whether you are merely projecting your instinctual desires to something fleeting. — TimeLine
Rosa Parks is beautiful because she represents something more than just this fleeting appearance, but that honour, courage, compassion elevate her to something more than just our desires, to something eternal. — TimeLine
Then you make some further suggestion about individual worldly processes that produce entities en masse.
Apart from coke bottles and model T fords, did you have some natural process in mind here.
What kind of process produces beaches for instance? There are loads of those everywhere. — apokrisis
The rest is typical nominalist evasion. — Wayfarer
do your encounter a beach as well as the grains of sand? — apokrisis
except for -well - any general noun. — Wayfarer
Just a dental reflection on race differences. — Bitter Crank
It seems like the scientific method is just the application of logic, reduced to 'scientific' axioms — MonfortS26
Some of them actually are. Hate tats all over the place like that, ruins the rest of her. — Sir2u
Why just women and not men? — TimeLine
Funny that they happen to be celebrities. — TimeLine
a defence of justification shall not fail by reason only that the truth of every charge is not proved if the words not proved to be true do not materially injure the plaintiff’s reputation having regard to the truth of the remaining charges.
From the Canadian Bar Association:
"A statement may hurt your reputation, but if it is true, anyone who says it has a valid defense if you sue them for defamation. They just have to prove, on the balance of probability, that their statement is true."
https://www.cbabc.org/For-the-Public/Dial-A-Law/Scripts/Your-Rights/240
When professors openly subscribe to and promote post-modern ideas, and then some students tell one another about it, it's not the student's fault; it's the fault of the professor. — VagabondSpectre
Where plaintiff to recover only actual damages
(2) The plaintiff shall recover only actual damages if it appears on the trial,
(a) that the alleged libel was published in good faith;
(b) that the alleged libel did not involve a criminal charge;
(c) that the publication of the alleged libel took place in mistake or misapprehension of the facts; and
(d) that a full and fair retraction of any matter therein alleged to be erroneous,
(i) was published either in the next regular issue of the newspaper or in any regular issue thereof published within three days after the receipt of the notice mentioned in subsection (1) and was so published in as conspicuous a place and type as was the alleged libel, or
(ii) was broadcast either within a reasonable time or within three days after the receipt of the notice mentioned in subsection (1) and was so broadcast as conspicuously as was the alleged libel. R.S.O. 1990, c. L.12, s. 5 (2).
These are for you. This was my horse Dasher whom I loved dearly and broke my back with but he is living a great life in Northern Arizona. Dasher was a true athlete. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
CCQ 1457. Every person has a duty to abide by the rules of conduct which lie upon him, according to the circumstances, usage or law, so as not to cause injury to another.
Actually, I don't know exactly what laws govern free speech in Canada. In the US, the first amendment concerns what the government can and can not do: — Bitter Crank
The notion of generals and particulars fails the test of naturalness? — apokrisis
I think we still resort to prelinguistic questioning. A perplexed look, for example, is very similar to one that a dog/cat sometimes expresses. — TheMadFool
Can you expand on that. How does language infect reality? — TheMadFool
So the world is present in the grammar of predication, or whatever. It is present in its most generalised possible form. It is a view of how the world works boiled down to a most abstract view about the necessity of certain relations. — apokrisis
Personally, I think every individual carries the mark of both good and bad. One is good sometimes and bad at other times. So, it's impossible to identify yourself with either in an exclusive sense. — TheMadFool
Do you think non-symbolic (non-linguistic) inquiry is better/worse than having language-based questions? — TheMadFool
Is there something interesting in the questioning tilt of a dog's head than all of the questions in philosophy? — TheMadFool
Do you consider yourself a Good person?
That's not a Law. — Rich
Without time and space the rest have no basis.
They should have evolutionary precedent. — charleton
"What?" doesn't even have a direct translation into French, being variously 'que', 'quoi', and 'qu'est-ce que'. I don't think the French have a radically different way of viewing the world to us, so I don't see how the singularity of a question like "why?" indicates that it is in some way more significant than, say "what colour?". — Pseudonym
He is regarded by most of today's edifice of social science as the ground from which sprang naturalistic science of biological diverisficaiton and evolution, human cultural change and economic and political development, and psychological and psychotherapeutic dynamics, as well as liberal theology. — Joshs
So, with this said, where do you draw the line between legitimate protesting and immoral violence? — rickyk95
Here's a definition of violence - Behavior involving physical force intended to hurt, damage, or kill someone or something. — T Clark
This probably says something negative about me, but the violence to grammar bothers me more than the sexual identify issue. — T Clark
On the other hand, it is my understanding that less than 1/2 of 1% of people in the US are transgender. Black people, who make up more than 10% of our population, — T Clark
I have a hard time swallowing pham’s argument. Supporting the conditions that create violence does not necessarily mean one is committing violence — czahar
There is no general definition in math that tells us what a number is. — fishfry
I would say that the Mind is the observer that learns (memory) and created new patterns from what it learns. — Rich