You asked, here's my answer:
introducing terms without providing a definition or conveying their meaning — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Of course, definitions are crucial.
But how demanding we should be must depend on context.
Since, for example, this thread is about a subject of mathematical logic, different contexts range from just philosophy about mathematics, to a blend of philosophy about mathematics and mathematics itself, to just the mathematics itself. Then there are degrees of formality, from very liberal informality to rigorous formality.
Forum-wide, usually mathematics is not the subject, but still there may be degrees of formality, from liberally speculative philosophy to more rigorous technical aspects of philosophy.
So what context do you have in mind regarding definitions?
Most informally, we know that of course we can't be bogged down by defining every word of English we use, and even if we could, we'd encounter circularity (English is not a formal language in which there are undefined primitives and then a sequence of definitions.)
For philosophy, I would agree that there should be an expectation that a poster should provide definitions for special philosophical terminology where there is a reasonable need to know the specific definitions. But there's still a limit - since we are not posting entire treatises, we don't have the time for everything.
For mathematics, in principle, every mathematical statement should be formalizable (this is called 'Hilbert's thesis'). But that's only in principle; in actual discourse, we have to be allowed informality, as long as we know, in the background of our reasoning, that could formalize it all if we had all the time and patience to do it (I nickname this 'Bourbaki's thesis'). So, yes, mathematicians, at least in principle, must be able to define all terminology down to the primitives. But, again, in a forum we don't have time to define everything down to, say, the sole primitive ('e' for epsilon, i.e. "member of") of set theory.
On the other hand, there are cranks. Cranks often talk
as if they are making mathematical statements (not just philosophical statements about mathematics) as they are using mathematical terminology. But their usage is incorrect, usually ludicrously so. And they have no concept even of what a mathematical definition is, or what the specific definitions are of the terminology they use. For me, as far as definitions, that is the worst of a forum such as this; and it's not just this forum, but all over the Internet.
It seems necessary to be in agreement on all terms before arguing one way or another on an issue. Otherwise, how would you know whether or not you agree without a doxastic view of it? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I know what 'doxastic' means, but I don't know what you mean by "a doxastic view of it" in that context.
therefore cannot grant any statements made by moral realists if they introduce normative terms on a stance-independent construal. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I know what 'moral realism' and 'normative' mean, and maybe I have a bit of a sense of what 'stance-independence' means, but I don't know what is meant by 'introduce normative terms on a stance-independent construal'.
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"It is not our business to set up prohibitions, but rather to arrive at conventions." - Rudolph Carnap