But it would be very hard to argue, for you I mean, that there is a problem with more laws. — Coben
So far you are wonderfully consistent. most people like to be able to say their way is better, not as a preference. — Coben
And to know this, we need to be able to show that it's a cause.
You're on a philosophy board. You're familiar with epistemology, right? — Terrapin Station
We are able to show that it is a cause to the satisfaction of almost every expert in the field. — Isaac
But how can we get something wrong in a system if it is act according to it and there is no objective criterion for deciding which system is better ? :smile: — Wittgenstein
I'm not about to hinge it on the mere fact that people are socially recognized as "experts in the field" — Terrapin Station
You're suggesting that the 'so called' experts are not to be trusted, — Isaac
You've simply assumed it as the default and required that we offer evidence sufficient to convince you of a causal link. — Isaac
I'm asking, and have been from the start, why you feel the burden of proof falls on those claiming a causal link when it comes to legislation, and not on those claiming that the observed correlation is not causal. — Isaac
So, terrapin's trivial misunderstanding is that if something is not a sufficient cause, it's not a cause at all.
— Baden
That pretty much nails it.
Despite...
"Causality (also referred to as causation,[1] or cause and effect) is efficacy, by which one process or state, a cause, contributes to the production of another process or state, an effect,[2] where the cause is partly responsible for the effect, and the effect is partly dependent on the cause. In general, a process has many causes,[3] which are also said to be causal factors for it, and all lie in its past."
From Terrapin's favourite source of authority Wikipedia, on Causality. — Isaac
We need to apply sociology and statistics to clarify that hate speech often leads to violence. But if we do, the result is clear: hate speech leads to violence often enough to legislate against it. — Pattern-chaser
What field do you think is pertinent, and from where are we getting the notion that most experts in the field in question think that speech is causal to subsequent actions? — Terrapin Station
To trust something merely because they're experts is the argument from authority fallacy. — Terrapin Station
What factual claim do you think I'm making? — Terrapin Station
Psychology deals with observed causes and effects and fits them to hypotheses on the basis of consistency. Neuroscience deals with cause and effect with observed brain activity and fits them to hypotheses on the basis of co-incident behaviours. — Isaac
Just open a standard textbook on the subject. I guarantee you it will assume a causal link between environmental variables (such as the speech of others) and behaviour. — Isaac
That actions are taken free from causal influence from the environment. — Isaac
Can you give a couple examples of what you're sampling for a claim like that? — Terrapin Station
No, I can't be bothered. You know as as I well how such inquiries are carried out. — Pattern-chaser
I don't at all believe that there's any example of looking at this where it would turn out that most people exposed to an utterance reacted violently. — Terrapin Station
What are a couple examples you have in mind of psychologists and/or neuroscientists claiming that speech is causal to subsequent actions in other people? — Terrapin Station
I'm not about to waste my time linking papers by authorities you fully intend to reject. — Isaac
I said nothing like that. Not the least reason for which is the odd conjunction of "causal" and "influence." — Terrapin Station
Okay. I can't say I'm at all surprised. — Terrapin Station
What is odd about causal and influence being conjoined? — Isaac
Why, do you think that most experts would not agree? — Isaac
where it's at least suggested that the others, those being caused to act, didn't have a choice in how they acted — Terrapin Station
Who said anything about "didn't have a choice in how they acted", — Isaac
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