so one wouldn't need to prove that shooting people causes them to die in order to make it punishable? — khaled
So if one were to empirically establish that hate speech increases the likely hood of violence wouldn't that be good grounds for banning it? — khaled
Above I wrote "'X makes y more likely' isn't a statement of causality" and "On my view only causality matters."
So why do I have to write both again a couple hours later — Terrapin Station
Now. Does this mean the ONLY way for something to be punishable for you is if it has a single cause — khaled
I don't you remember you doing so. So would B C and E all be punishable or what? — khaled
It's ridiculous to think I was ever suggesting anything special about "things with single causes." — Terrapin Station
Yeah, that's in a welter of stimuli. Someone walks up to you in a not noisy corrider and says 'excuse me' pauses 'your hair is on fire' You might not believe them but you are going to get that sentence and that sentence will affect you, whether you believe it or not, though the effects will be different.In order to parse lyrics/vocals semantically when I listen to music, I have to make an effort to focus on that aspect. — Terrapin Station
When the elephant thing first came up, — Terrapin Station
Now. Say X is hate speech, Y is violence and C is free will — khaled
you are going to get that sentence and that sentence will affect you, — Coben
As in X is the sound waves, C is the final result of the indeterminate mental processes in your brain. — khaled
A is hate speech, BC and D are the additional thing your brain has to do to that speech to cause you to act violently. — Isaac
If it's indeterminate it's not causal — Terrapin Station
I said beyond wishful thinking. — Isaac
So I assume rigging a gun to shoot randomly by some indeterminate mechanism (say, random nuclear decay) and putting that in a public street is fine? — khaled
I want you to admit that it's not causal first. Is it causal? — Terrapin Station
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