Yes. You may choose to have a certain belief, in the same way you may choose to dress yourself in a certain way.Are we even responsible for our beliefs in the same sense as we're responsible for our actions? — Dusty of Sky
Murder happens daily, with the intention of food production. Some may say that's okay, others may say it is horrible.But is it wrong to be a moral nihilist who doesn't believe that it's wrong to commit murder? Is it wrong to go a step further and believe that it's morally good to commit murder? — Dusty of Sky
You may choose to have a certain belief, in the same way you may choose to dress yourself in a certain way. — Shamshir
Belief and action are a pair. — Shamshir
You enact your beliefs. — Shamshir
Even if I am publicly advocating for violence in a compelling and charismatic way that causes people to commit terrorist attacks? — Dusty of Sky
Speech can't be causal as in physical forcing anyone to do anything. — Terrapin Station
Sure. But every refusal you make, means you choose something over the refused object.
So every time you refuse to believe something, you also choose to believe something else.
You don't refuse without a choice; so you have some responsibility in the matter. — Shamshir
Are we even responsible for our beliefs in the same sense as we're responsible for our actions? — Dusty of Sky
For example, the fundamental equality of all persons is established. It is therefore wrong to prejudiciously discriminate against persons or groups of persons. — tim wood
Not directly. But there's definitely some truth in the saying that the pen has more power than the sword. The Crusades were inspired partly by Christian preaching. Revolutions are usually inspired by political dissidents. Darth Sideous used language to turn Anakin to the dark side. So language can definitely have disastrous consequences. — Dusty of Sky
How can you prove a statement like that? I don't believe that all people are equal in any way. Is that immoral? — Dusty of Sky
Are we even responsible for our beliefs in the same sense as we're responsible for our actions? — Dusty of Sky
Relativism cannot Condemn the Holocaust — thedeadidea
"I wrote the above some time ago as a sort of aphoristic exercise I am trying to undertake to sharpen my prose.In all seriousness," — thedeadidea
An aphoristic exercise you're trying to undertake to sharpen your prose, via writing things you do not agree with? — Terrapin Station
I assumed more integrity on your part that you would not quote one premise from a logical syllogism and contextualize that as the whole of my position. — thedeadidea
And you seem to be confusing the terms all people, individuals, and people, and ignoring the term "fundamental." And then you're opposing a belief against a proposition. When it comes to beliefs and feelings, there is no accounting for either, and you get to have either in any way you want. But do you act on the basis of them? To date if yes, it would seem just ignorance on your part, your actions based on your feelings and beliefs, a state of innocence. But now you're been told, so your innocence is disappearing faster than an ice cube in hot tea on a hot day. I do not really flatter myself or this site that this is the first you've ever heard of the fundamental equality of people, so I doubt you're very innocent. But this is serious business. If you have wrong beliefs you now know and likely have known that they're wrong. Act on them and indeed it is immoral, and maybe also whatever your action(s) are, are illegal. — tim wood
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.