So you don't buy free will. — Terrapin Station
I certainly don't buy your interpretation of it. — S
Would you subscribe to a compatibilist version of it? I don't believe that compatibilism is coherent. — Terrapin Station
As I've requested many times, specify all of the causal factors/the causal chain. — Terrapin Station
Censorship of ideas by itself has repercussions on a cultural level that mere traffic regulations don't have. — Necrofantasia
f you enable systemic censorship of one ideology on a preventive basis, you can always make the case to include others on similar grounds, gradually expanding the criteria of what gets censored depending of the agendas authorities want you to follow. — Necrofantasia
We have a correlation between censorship of detractors and authoritarianism in history and it has been established as a power consolidation device. It is also a core component of the definition of Fascism. It's not just my speculation. — Necrofantasia
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
Can you explain how necessary and sufficient causation makes your case here? — DingoJones
If you enable systemic censorship of one ideology on a preventive basis, you can always make the case to include others on similar grounds, gradually expanding the criteria of what gets censored depending on the agendas the authorities want you to follow. — Necrofantasia
Firstly, why would I need to specify all of the causal links in the chain if you are, as you claim, not dismissing correlations. — Isaac
So, terrapin's trivial misunderstanding is that if something is not a sufficient cause, it's not a cause at all. — Baden
You want to argue causation. Correlations do not imply causation. That's not dismissing correlations as such. They simply do not imply causation. — Terrapin Station
From Terrapin's favourite source of authority Wikipedia, — Isaac
Correlations do not imply causation. That's not dismissing correlations as such. They simply do not imply causation. — Terrapin Station
lol--I simply pointed you to an article about something you weren't familiar with. — Terrapin Station
Do you see smoking as causal in lung cancer, — Coben
As am I. — Isaac
What did you think I wasn't familiar with and what was your evidence? — Terrapin Station
I think that for most medical claims, we don't know causes very well. Genetics seem to have a lot more to do with it than we usually stress culturally. At any rate, it's well-known that we continually come out with studies a la "coffee is good for you," "No, coffee is bad for you," "Chocolate is bad for you," "No, chocolate is good for you," etc., and not just because of different details. — Terrapin Station
I maintain that correlation does imply causation. — Isaac
the fact of a correlation doesn't tell you anything about causes. — Terrapin Station
You seem to be unfamiliar with the meaning of the word 'cause' my evidence being that you cannot accept something as a cause if it is merely contributory, — Isaac
It tells you that the factor which correlates is more likely to be a cause than one which doesn't. — Isaac
Would you think that telling people that regular cigarette smoking increases your chances of lung cancer and emphysema would be ok? — Coben
Would you based on these facts think that restricting driving while intoxicated is wrong? — Coben
Or making the introduction of toxins in food potentially illegal, — Coben
All I require is that we actually show that it's a cause, which requires showing the other causes or a causal chain — Terrapin Station
Here's where I have a door open to hate speech laws: I don't like probablistic treatment of individuals. So, if I seem to be doing something that might be lead to problems in some percentage of people, so I get punished, I am resistent. This even includes anything from jaywalking to driving over the speed limit in the world of traffic and elsewhere in other facets of life.It would rather be like claiming that smoking causes lung cancer where one isn't buying causal determinism in general--say where one believes that ALL phenomena are akin to probabilistic phenomena. — Terrapin Station
but also want to protect other people from the statistical results of what happens when many engage in the activity. — Coben
It wasn't hate speech per se, it was hate speech delivered by a charismatic authority figure, in the right socioeconomic climate and allowing it to go unchallenged. Basically without the alignment of various socioeconomic factors, hate speech would be little more than words. The factors that enabled Nazism have been the topic of discussion of historians for decades for this reason. To say it was just speech is too simplistic, too local. — Necrofantasia
I have been screaming this along the whole thread. People are really paranoid on losing their free speech by banning hate speech.A classic slippery slope argument.
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