The law I want to protect me is not a law prohibiting some speech, but a law prohibiting laws prohibiting speech. — Terrapin Station
What qualification do you use--something vague like "harm"? — Terrapin Station
Well, and anyone can consider anything a harm to themselves, for any reason. So we can't just go with a blanket "harm" criterion. So then it becomes a matter of what someone wants to count versus what they don't want to count, which is really just an excuse to disallow stuff they don't personally like.
How is it a decision or choice if there's only one option? — Terrapin Station
It's reasoned from my foundations — Terrapin Station
It's reasoned from my foundations — Terrapin Station
The law I want to protect me is not a law prohibiting some speech, but a law prohibiting laws prohibiting speech. — Terrapin Station
Then I think this (together with with your rampant sociopathy) is where we are irreconcilable. I just can't understand any foundational principle that's so convoluted. Most people have things like human well-being, getting to heaven, natural order (or what they perceive it to be). They then argue from there what actually constitutes any of those things and how best to achieve them. But to have as ones foundational position as a desire to let everyone do what they want to the maximum extent, even if that makes most people miserable. I just can't get my head around that.
Still - each to their own. Fortunately people like me (or vaguely like me) outnumber people like you significantly so we can force you to behave with a semblance of human compassion even if you don't want to.
My point was that we judge whether or not to restrict free speech based on the anticipated consequences, since we agree "objective moral values" don't exist.I'm guessing you must think it's bad to inhibit people from doing what they want. Is that it?
— Relativist
Yes. Didn't I explicitly say that? I thought I had. — Terrapin Station
It’s a desire to oppose state and mob coercion, as is evident by your desire to force us into conformity. — NOS4A2
But how does free speech achieve this if speech acts have no causal effects? How does free speech make people diagnose, improve and correct things, I thought speech was supposed to be incapable of making people do anything?
Or, to put it another way. If we can rely on the good sense of individuals not to be swayed by hate speech, why can we not rely on the good sense of individuals to diagnose and correct society's problems without needing to be prompted to do so by an opposition rally? — Isaac
No. None that I know of. The massive problem with social sciences is that it is almost impossible to properly control for secondary factors. We just cannot (ethically or practically) set up experiments with sufficient control groups to actually demonstrate anything to the level of accuracy expected in other fields. The question I'm interested in (of which this debate is just an example) is what do we do about that. Do we just throw our hands up and say "we might as well just guess"? — Isaac
I disagree. Our world views are largely a consequence of our environment, and speech constitutes a large part of that environment.There are no consequences, positive or negative, to speech. — NOS4A2
I disagree. Our world views are largely a consequence of our environment, and speech constitutes a large part of that environment.
Then how come my speech isn’t contributing to your world view? It seems to have the opposite effect. — NOS4A2
You've switched from "consequence" to "contribution". Moving the goalposts again, I see.
One consequence which your speech tends to have on me is that it has me laughing or shaking my head in disbelief.
That’s a lie, I said “contributing”. Again you’re revealing more about yourself than you can about reality. — NOS4A2
There isn't only one option. I think you need to backtrack and explain yourself properly before directing such loaded questions my way. — S
Contribute is a verb, consequence is a noun. Do you know the difference? — NOS4A2
How does actual working vision help you if it has no causal effects? Applying a coloured lens to your glasses is not "causal" to action, but it sure alters how you perceive the world. — Necrofantasia
Yes. They're two different words, with two different meanings. The word "contribute" has more of a positive connotation (as in e.g. "What did you contribute to the team?") which "consequence" lacks. Do you understand that?
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