Um... What alternative do you think I have apart from what I think you're arguing? Telepathy? — Isaac
I never said you said so, so there's no straw man. There was an "if" in my last reply that you seem to have missed. That was one possible interpretation, and it fits, given the context. But even if it wasn't a hasty generalisation, then it was nevertheless a fallacy of relevance, more broadly.
It can't, and it most certainly can't by merely appealing to the experience of you or I, as you did in your original comment, as that would obviously be too small a sample group, and would fail to account for more relevant cases where people have actually been convicted of hate crimes.
Reading what I had already written in the thread? — Terrapin Station
Tsk... the questions were rhetorical, but I guess it's a lost art.The fact that you have to ask these questions (rather than simply provide me with empirical evidence of the answers) means that it is possible that the correlation we observe is causal. If there were no such possibility, we would have ready access to the empirical evidence refuting such an hypothesis. — Isaac
For those who insist on finding case studies of empirical evidence of hate speech causing undue and unwarranted violence, I offer the example of Nazi Germany. The Jews and the Christians reluctantly had mulled about doing their own business, and more-or-less had strived within the situation of multi-religious nations. Then came a hate speaker, and as a direct result of his efforts, six million Jews were brutally executed, or horribly tortured or both. This is a direct result of having a single solitary person spewing out hate speech. If you need any more evidence than this that hate speech is effective, then first drive a dagger through my throat. — god must be atheist
So, to re-iterate my question. Given that there remains the possibility that the correlation we observe is causal, would it not recklessly risk the wellbeing of those potential victims for us to proceed as if the correlation were not causal simply on the grounds that it might not be? — Isaac
I understand your outrage, but it doesn't exactly do much to show me the error of my ways, or make me inclined to take you seriously or in good faith.I said enough. To those who advocate the return of unrestricted hate speech to society, i have only one message for you: go fuck yourselves. — god must be atheist
That’s false. It was a question, not an argument. — NOS4A2
Hitler’s speeches incite me to the opposite, actually, to the hatred of Hitler. — NOS4A2
There is no point in equivocating between hate crimes and hate speech. One is not the topic, the other is. — NOS4A2
But “incitement”, the idea that words can induce one to hatred, is magical thinking, which is a point i’ve Been making since the beginning. — NOS4A2
If you want to see my arguments as to why hate speech should be allowed, we can talk about the rest of the arguments you suspiciously refused to quote. — NOS4A2
But “incitement”, the idea that words can induce one to hatred, is magical thinking, which is a point i’ve Been making since the beginning. — NOS4A2
Hitler’s speeches incite me to the opposite, actually, to the hatred of Hitler. — NOS4A2
If there was a causal connection between hate speech on its own — Necrofantasia
Censorship at a government level would act as a gateway for authoritarianism/ fascism by clearing the largest barrier to increasingly oppressive governance (think of the frog in boiling water analogy) . This would in my opinion endanger many more lives, hinder the quality of life of people as a whole and facilitate intellectual regression. — Necrofantasia
Who said anything about the causal connection being about hate speech on its own? If hate speech were one factor which together with other factors, lead to violence, why would that have any bearing on whether we should legislate against it? — Isaac
I could say the same, where does that get us? — Isaac
If hate speech were one factor which together with other factors, — Isaac
Just as different drugs draw forth different humors from the body – some putting a stop to disease, others to life – so too with words: some cause pain, others joy, some strike fear, some stir the audience to boldness, some benumb and bewitch the soul with evil persuasion
As I've requested many times, specify all of the causal factors/the causal chain. — Terrapin Station
It seems obvious that those who believe words carry some force of power must believe they themselves can exert that power, and as a corollary, that it can be used on them. — NOS4A2
Of course they can, silly. It's called manipulation, and it's a skill, although it comes more naturally to some than others. It is a fundamental part of my job role as a salesperson. I am required, as part of my job, to use language to my advantage, in order to increase profit.
But you’re not much of a manipulator if they know your skills and can see your con from a mile away. Your magical powers are negated. — NOS4A2
Who said anything about the causal connection being about hate speech on its own? If hate speech were one factor which together with other factors, lead to violence, why would that have any bearing on whether we should legislate against it? Driving at 80 miles per hour through a village is only one factor leading to an increase in RTA deaths, that doesn't mean we shouldn't prohibit it. — Isaac
But surely censorship would be only one factor among many in this degradation of civil life, not the sole direct cause. So why dont your concerns here suffer from the same problem as the correlation between hate speech and violence? — Isaac
Simply claiming that censorship will lead to the problems you cite, but allowing hate speech will not lead to the problems I'm concerned about, doesn't really get us anywhere. If we're just down to speculation about whose consequences will come to be, there's not much more to say.
I maintain that in such circumstances we should err on the side of caution. We have a correlation between hate speech and violence. We have no examples where banning hate speech has lead to the slippery slope you describe. Why would we act on your speculation and not historical correlation? — Isaac
Yes, I think the political division is a media-induced hysteria, mostly for reasons of profit, and Trump is the scapegoat for what they’ve caused — NOS4A2
It's unreasonable to ask him to list them all, — S
It's not unreasonable if he wants me to believe that speech can be causal to actions. — Terrapin Station
The main thing we'd have to show is that the people in question do not have free will in the situations in question. I don't know how we'd show that, though. — Terrapin Station
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