I'm not going to do word play with you. If you really have something to 'teach', lay out the process of decision making and provide empirical evidence for it.
As you can see folks, Terrapin has nothing to teach. — Baden
his only alternative is to demand I agree with his bare assertion, — Baden
And there are different contexts under which force can be defined, physical, psychological et — Baden
It's not part of any set of phenomena that FORCE the actions in question. — Terrapin Station
Buy the way, if you're a Laplacean determinist, why wouldn't you be claiming that the subsequent actions are physically forced? — Terrapin Station
Oh that dangerous free speech fanaticism, sure to lead to genocide and death. Of course, free speech fanaticism has never lead to any such extreme, only to the defense of human rights. — NOS4A2
People have indeed falsely shouted "Fire!" in crowded public venues and caused panics on numerous occasions, such as at the Royal Surrey Gardens Music Hall of London in 1856, a theater in New York's Harlem neighborhood in 1884,[8] and in the Italian Hall disaster of 1913, which left 73 dead. In the Shiloh Baptist Church disaster of 1902, over 100 people died when "fight" was misheard as "fire" in a crowded church causing a panic and stampede. — Wikipedia
And the answer is that you could apply the same reasoning, but in the case of hate speech there's a sensible basis for banning it,
— S
. . . What does that have to do with Shamshir's post? — Terrapin Station
Neurology. Sounds are physical, neurolgical reactions to them are physical
— khaled
You'd be claiming that mind isn't involved in other words? — Terrapin Station
So his speech forces them to talk about what they do? — Terrapin Station
I don’t see it. I wouldn’t imagine a blue elephant just because you told me to. I would have to choose to do so. — NOS4A2
So, while you are reading my words here in this sentence you are choosing to have the meanings of these words arise in your mind. And if I mentioned brain or horse, unless you chose have the meaning of those words arise in your mind, those meanings would not appear there.
The meaning is not in your consciousness. You not thinking about it before. And further what you are implying is that if you read any text and there is any new idea at all, you must choose consciously to let that new idea or image come into your mind or it will not. Me, when I read and if someone describes something or shouts something and its new, I can get new images automatically in my mind. It can even happen with conversations I am not focusing on but I am in the same room as. Suddenly I realize they just said 'albino bat' and I see the image and understand the phrase and wonder what the heck the context is for that novel to me phrase. Suddenly I am aware someone said albino bat, which would likely be accompanied by an image I did not choose to construct, and 100% a meaning for that phrase I did not decide to construct. I have an unconscious mind doing all sorts of stuff.I don’t think I need the meaning to “arise in my mind”. I already know the meaning. The meaning is already there. They are not put there or otherwise coaxed into my mind by your words. — NOS4A2
If it is not me, then what is controlling my mind? — NOS4A2
The meaning is not in your consciousness. You not thinking about it before. And further what you are implying is that if you read any text and there is any new idea at all, you must choose consciously to let that new idea or image come into your mind or it will not. Me, when I read and if someone describes something or shouts something and its new, I can get new images automatically in my mind. It can even happen with conversations I am not focusing on but I am in the same room as. Suddenly I realize they just said 'albino bat' and I see the image and understand the phrase and wonder what the heck the contet is for that novel to me phrase.
And what are the criteria you use to decide whether to let a novel phrase or novel image arise in your mind when you decide to make the image or not?
It doesn't follow from the fact that you don't have full control over your mind that someone or something else is controlling your mind. Like Terrapin, you are using inappropriate language that I haven't used.
It is known scientifically, as well as simply being a matter of common sense, that our thoughts and behaviour can be involuntarily influenced.
Now, sincerely, can I get an example of thoughts and behavior being involuntarily influenced? — NOS4A2
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