If you took two crowds and to one said "think of a blue elephant and to the other you said nothing, are you seriously telling me you think the proportion of people thinking of blue elephants would be exactly the same?
You didn’t put the blue elephant there. — NOS4A2
Because both those expressions make it more likely that people will think violent actions against those groups or in favour of those causes are acceptable than would be the case had they not been said/done. — Isaac
I thought you were at least talking about explicit exhortations to commit violence. — Terrapin Station
So you don't believe that teaching a dog to raise its paw in response to "Sieg Heil" is at all correlated with violence. — Terrapin Station
ut I’ll state that you will gladly think of a blue elephant if someone told you to. — NOS4A2
It’s nonsensical. — NOS4A2
If you're focused on what they're saying, you're in a compliant mood, etc., sure. It doesn't force you to think of a blue elephant of course.
So his speech forces them to talk about what they do? — Terrapin Station
Tell you what. Let's use Twitter. Have a look at the BBC twitter feed and we'll note what they're talking about. Then we'll wait for some politician to make a speech. My bet will be that the twitter feed is more likely to be about the content of that speech than it was before he spoke. Your bet is that his speech will make no difference at all to what the BBC journalists choose to talk about.
A thousand quid, just send me your details and I'll set it up.
I never said people won’t talk about another’s words. — NOS4A2
It doesn’t have any consequence on others but that does not entail we do not talk about things in the world, for instance words and speech. — NOS4A2
No one throughout this entire discussion has used the word 'forced' nor any term like it to describe the effect speech acts have on others, — Isaac
Okay, but (a) that's what I'm referring to by "cause"--if we're not talking about force, we're not talking about causes in my view, and (b) that's the only thing that I think is morally/legally problematic. If you're not forcing someone to do something, it's their choice to do whatever it is. I wouldn't make ANY influence, manipulation, etc. illegal, period.
It should have been more than clear that that's the only sense of "cause" that I use, by the way.
that's what I'm referring to by "cause"--if we're not talking about force, we're not talking about causes in my view — Terrapin Station
that's the only thing that I think is morally/legally problematic. — Terrapin Station
The phrase “speech act” assumes two actions in one act of speaking. 1) the utterance and 2) the changing of reality. I dispute 2. — NOS4A2
Right, so if you dispute 2 then take the bet. The politician's speech is unable to change reality, so whatever probability existed in reality that the BBC twitter feed would be on the subject of the speech before the politicians spoke, that will be the same probability after he speaks. If his speaking is unable to change reality then the probability will remain unchanged. So you've got nothing to lose taking the bet have you?
the politicians speech was not there before but now it is and we can access it—but it won’t change anything beyond the medium. — NOS4A2
OK two groups of football gamblers. One have seen the pre-match commentary in which the manager talks about what a bad feeling he has about the game, how his players have not been on good form, how his star striker is injured... The other group have not heard this commentary.
I bet a thousand pounds that the group which have heard the commentary place fewer and smaller bets on the team winning than the group who have not heard the commentary.
You up for it?
So speech (the commentary) will have had consequences, in reality, on the actual behaviour (bet placing) of other people.
Finally.
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