If they had a choice, then the speech wasn't the cause. Their decision was. — Terrapin Station
Better for people in general? and/or 'is having less laws better in the sense that more laws cause a net gain in worse effects?' — Coben
Decisions are influenced causally by a wide range of factors. — S
If they had a choice, then the speech wasn't the cause. Their decision was. — Terrapin Station
No. If they had what appears to be a choice, — Isaac
I'm not sure what you're thinking here. People will have preferences for approaches to government. You can prefer fewer laws. — Terrapin Station
For the 100th time, influences are not causes. — Terrapin Station
Either it's an ontological fact that they had a choice or it is not. — Terrapin Station
your understanding of the meaning that is wrong? — Isaac
Yes, but we might not know the truth of that fact, hence "appears". — Isaac
What I'm talking about is the ontological situation where there's a choice. — Terrapin Station
Better is always in someone's opinion. "Better for people in general" is ambiguous because of that. I think it's better with respect to people in general. People in general might not have that opinion (as a consensus or whatever).
Less laws is better because most laws, in my opinion, infringe upon behavior they shouldn't infringe on. — Terrapin Station
That has wrong what meaning and understanding are. — Terrapin Station
We can't say, without making un-agreed upon commitments, that such a situation can exist, hence we must proceed in the absence of such certainty. We have to act despite it. That's what I'm questioning, how we do that. Why presume a genuine free choice can be made when there is zero evidence to support that view? — Isaac
Right, but it's a political level discussion. In most cases when people argue for a political level option in policy, they will argue that Policy A is good becasue it causes X and Y and Policy B or not having policy A is bad because it causes Z and Ä. But for you, given your very strict sense of what can be called a cause, such things are very hard to demonstrate. IOW I was raising the issue of whether it is good or better to have few laws to see if you would justify this in terms of causes and effects. — Coben
Not according to my understanding of the terms 'meaning' and 'wrong' — Isaac
So again, you don't buy free will? Just be upfront about that if so. There are a lot of people on this board who'd agree with that. — Terrapin Station
It's not about buying free will or not. — Isaac
So, we could say you reach your political position (of legal parsimony) as a deontologist not as a consquentialist. (?)No. It's purely a matter of a lot of laws being about stuff that I think government has no business intruding on. For example, "saggy pants laws," or laws about whether you can sublet a property you own, or whether you can operate it as an Airbnb. — Terrapin Station
So, we could say you reach your political position (of legal parsimony) as a deontologist not as a consquentialist. — Coben
For the 100th time, influences are not causes. — Terrapin Station
Why are you introducing "appear"? Either it's an ontological fact that they had a choice or it is not. — Terrapin Station
which in part caused me to purchase a number of books on the topic. — S
You didn't choose to purchase the books? — Terrapin Station
Sure it is. I don't believe it's uncertain whether free will obtains. — Terrapin Station
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