Do you really believe that there are no real differences in quality between comparable things? That some movies, food, TV programs, paintings, photographs, novels are not better than others? That it's all just a matter of preference? — T Clark
I can recognize the difference between what I like and what is of high quality. — T Clark
Using the term SJW to discredit a group or individual is a form of control — Fooloso4
How do we know the people wearing silly Halloween costumes don't want to bring about a society in which ethnic minorities have their choices restricted by social pressure in exactly the same way. — Isaac
But perhaps the main point I wanted to make is that it is still the outcome of the act you're judging, which means the act itself (speech in this case) seems irrelevant. — Isaac
Ah, my mistake. I wasn't clear enough. I meant 'extent' as in the extent to which some action inexorably leads to the restrictions you speak about. — Isaac
Ok whatever you say. I don't get you with these one lined sentences. If you don't like the answer so be it but I cannot do more beyond something like what you're saying. — Anaxagoras
I've done that many times already. I'm talking about where you want the person to lose their job, lose anything like their shelter, healthcare, etc., more or less lose their ability to make a living, to be imprisoned --anything like that.OK, so can you pin down the 'extent'? — Isaac
The "control" you object to is to prevent the unjust from violating the just rights of others. — Dfpolis
I meant what is the basis of TS's and I think your core belief that all mental phenomena is by definition subjective. — Rank Amateur
But you do think it's 'wrong'. I'm trying to understand why, basically. — Isaac
This is like the positions of wrong to kill vs abortion vs death penalty or the case that criminals do not like criminal offences committed against them. Cases of cognitive dissonance you could say. — Andrew4Handel
I'm basically confused between your hard-line position on free speech (which seems predicated on the fact that speech acts alone do not cause harm) and your opposition to the SJW's in these cases who (despite their nefarious objectives) were, afterall, only performing speech acts, and were therefore harmless. — Isaac
In this you're akin to a pre-Kantian idealist. To the idealist it all occurs only in minds. The question, then, is that if it really is all a matter of mind, then how do you know anything at all of the world? How do you know anything at all, period? How even do you get to the question of knowledge? — tim wood
But I fail to understand how in that case you can move out of your personal preference mode to register any sort of complaint or argument that anyone should find cause to pay attention to, except as they prefer to. — tim wood
But I think you have logically invalidated the value of life by killing one person without his or her consent. — Andrew4Handel
On the other hand if you do accept the death of one person like this what logical grounds do you then have for condemning arbitrary violence. — Andrew4Handel
I think Zhou can respond for himself. — NKBJ
firstly, this is your flying teapot, not mine. It should not be my job to prove your point is false. I — Rank Amateur
I find 2 a more logical explanation than 1. — Rank Amateur
billions upon billions of individual mental phenomena all independently reach the same moral judgment. — Rank Amateur
You're repeating yourself again. Like I said before, you and I are at an impasse here, so I don't see a point in continuing the conversation with you. Sorry, but I do hope you have more fruitful discussions with someone else. — NKBJ
Near universal moral judgments on some issues is evidence that the source of some moral judgments could have a source outside individual mental phenomena. — Rank Amateur
Both ↪tim wood
and myself have pointed to near universal moral judgments, and at least my underlying question on these is, as above, does it not show that there can be objectively moral views that individual thoughts can be in error of. — Rank Amateur
So I would say there is evidence that I can think things that are in conflict with objective and verifiable reality. — Rank Amateur
Is there some support for: all moral judgments are individual mental phenomena
and therefor subjective. ? — Rank Amateur
I understand the problem: you think philosophy is just a matter of opinion.
Then riddle me this: if every opinion is equally valid and true for that person why do you bother arguing with me? My opinion is, after all, just as valid as yours (according to your view) and I (by your definition) can neither be right nor wrong. Or, I'm always right, and so are you, because we're all right all the time as long as we think we're right. So why try to convince me of anything? — NKBJ
I believe I should pay my utility bills on time. This belief entails an action. I believe I should bathe regularly, so I do. We quickly get into the territory of habitual behavior (I put my keys in my right front pocket, my comb in my back right pocket, my wallet in my back left pocket...) which are not related to belief at all. — Bitter Crank
