I think showing our body through internet is bad from an ethical point of view — javi2541997
I understand. We have been discussing the ethics of showing our body on the internet this whole time. I have been trying to request from you the argument supporting your claim. Its like the example argument i gave you supporting the claim “I am alive”. A claim requires a supporting argument (additional statements) in order to be convincing. I can give you an example argument that would support your claim, but I cannot give you one which is [1] “valid” and [2] “sound” ([1] ”a conclusion which follows logically from the premises” and “containing all true premises”) because that is precisely what im trying to hear from you. Anyway, just to give you an idea, or at least better clarify what im looking for, here is one example (and subsequently my refutation of it).
First, the argument in common language: Showing our bodies through the internet is bad (this is the main or concluding statement of your argument) because you will be exploited by others (this is a supporting statement or premise). Now, the argument in formal language: (p1) If showing our bodies on the internet will result in our exploitation, then showing our bodies on the internet is bad; (p2) showing our bodies on the internet will result in our exploitation; (c) therefore showing our bodies on the internet is bad.
This is a [1] modus ponens [2] syllogism ([1] an argument structure which uses a conditional statement (e.g. if the stove is 450 degrees, then touching it will burn your skin) to bridge the inference between the conclusion (main claim) and the premise (supporting claim). It then asserts the truth of the premise (touching a 450 degree stove will burn your skin), from which (as long as the premise is accepted) the conclusion must follow). ([2] an argument in three parts (using three statements): conclusion, premise and inference). The example argument is valid because each of the statements follow logically from one another (assuming all the statements are true). However, it is not sound because the statement of the premise (showing our body on the internet
results in exploitation) is demonstrably false.
My refutation demonstrates a proof by contradiction (to say something is both true and false). This is a deductive argument (meaning the statements are absolute and the inference necessary or without exception), and as such, the statement of the premise (showing our body on the internet results in exploitation) is to say: “In absolutely every case where a person exposes themselves on the internet they have been exploited, as it is impossible to do so otherwise”. Kind of like a square having four corners: If you are a square you have four corners. We cannot imagine a square with anything other than four sides, which means it isn’t logically possible (logical impossibility means to say so derives a contradiction).
We cannot imagine a square with anything other than four sides, so to say a square exists with three sides is to say a square both has and does not have four sides (3 is not 4). Now, the premise says “showing our body on the internet results in exploitation” in the same way. In this cases, however, I can imagine a scenario where someone could show their body without exploitation (“exploitation” here being defined as “the mistreatment of a person for ones own self benefit”). The key is “mistreatment” because if a person doesn’t feel like they are being treated unfairly, or moreover, feels satisfied and well treated, and since ones own treatment or mistreatment depends on ones own feelings (which are private and acceptable only to them), then we only need one case wherein the individual performed the act of showing themselves on the internet, and then, based on their own feelings (that we have no access to), expressed no feelings of mistreatment, and furthermore never retracted the statement at a later time, would be all that we needed to derive a contradiction.
To summarize, if we are making deductive claims by using absolute terms and expressions, it is necessary to demonstrate that anything otherwise is impossible (squares with sides other than four), that is logically impossible because it is cognitively impossible to imagine. All it takes is an imagined scenario that cant be ruled out of the realm of possibility. Squares with more or lass than four sides —impossible. Someone who showed their body on the internet without feeling exploited, then and thereafter —possible.