As to the justification for the belief that such randomness exists: There is currently no explanation for why some behaviour on the microscopic scale appears random. So it's not unreasonable to conclude that the randomness observed is ontological randomness. — Echarmion
I know I'm going to regret this, and I shouldn't let you bait me, but here is the standard work on the causes of hate crime from the Human Right Commission. — Isaac
Here is a more up to date paper focussing on Germany. — Isaac
Section 2 "causes of hate crimes" discusses external causes. — Isaac
I'm not seeing info on the total number of people exposed to the speech in question versus how many of those people committed some sort of hate crime. — Terrapin Station
I don't believe I have dismissed them, I just am pointing out that giving authorities the tools to "protect" us by silencing others has a greater potential for long term harm and casualties than hate speech does..Again, you're merely speculating on the consequences which such censorship as we're discussing here might have. That's fine, but for the fact that you're simultaneously dismissing any similar speculation on the consequences of hate speech as unproven. — Isaac
No-one is talking about censorship on this scale. You cannot simply rely on 'slippery-slope' arguments absent of any justification for invoking such a thing. You might as well argue that we should have no laws restricting people's actions because how easy it would be for them to lead to draconian laws telling us what we can and cannot do. all laws could lead to more authoritarian versions of the same law. Why are laws prohibiting speech acts any different in this respect from laws prohibiting action? — Isaac
Nazi leaders embraced, encouraged and recommended hate, using the communications medium of (hate) speech, and violent acts of hate were subsequently enacted. There is a causal connection here. It is not formally causal, nor is the connection always direct, but it is there. This can be verified by empirical examination, using sociological and statistical tools. For we all know that hate speech cannot and does not infallibly lead to violence. It relies on certain aspects of humanity, i.e. the way that we can be provoked beyond endurance. It is easy to argue that we should not act in this way, but that's the "ought", where the "is" is that we do act in this way quite often. Often enough that we need to consider it, which is what we're doing here. — Pattern-chaser
Any and all actions following hate speech, whether violent, hateful, or otherwise, begins with the listener, not the speaker. This is true of any reaction to speech. — NOS4A2
This is important, by the way, because if a huge number of people saw the messages but very few of them committed any sort of hate crime, it suggests that the speech/action connection is very low, maybe negligible.
But the speech had the same effect on the listener as any other sound. — NOS4A2
I’m talking of real effects, as in cause and effect, not the specious “effects” you have in mind. Yes, light and sound have certain effects on the body. In that sense the effects are the same. — NOS4A2
Now it’s on you to explain how one combination of words can move someone differently than another combination of words. But that’s to argue for sorcery, which I believe is impossible. — NOS4A2
Are you telling me that you'd argue that a video of a cat playing with a ball of string, which was also found on his computer, had the same effect on him? It wouldn't have mattered which video was used as evidence against him in court? They could have used the video of the cat instead? — S
Thats not a valid justification, it is an argument from ignorance fallacy. Just because the answer isnt known doesnt mean you get to just insert one, even if its possible or plausible. — DingoJones
Which video? — S
'm not seeing info on the total number of people exposed to the speech in question versus how many of those people committed some sort of hate crime. — Terrapin Station
I looked through that, but I didn't see anything about correlation studies. — Terrapin Station
Sorry, was referring to this: "the police investigation found hate speech in video form on his computer, which was used as evidence against him."
What would that be evidence of? — Terrapin Station
This is what I wanted to avoid. Of course you don't see anything about correlation studies. — Isaac
Hate crime, obviously, which is defined as
a crime, typically one involving violence, that is motivated by prejudice on the basis of race, religion, sexual orientation, or other grounds. — S
No, it's not sorcery. You're being utterly ridiculous. The speeches of Martin Luther King Jr. and Hitler literally changed the world, and in significant ways, as did the writings of Karl Marx.
That wouldn't have happened if they had been replaced with Harry, Niall and Liam from One Direction.
You can’t make something true by sheer force of repetition. — NOS4A2
I'd never consider a video like that to count as evidence of motivation, but at any rate, I'd not classify anything as a "hate crime" in the first place. — Terrapin Station
That's because you have bizarre fringe views which are far removed from the reasonable standards of courts of law. — S
Well, I don't go along with the crowd just to go along with the crowd, at least. — Terrapin Station
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.