C'mon, man--just how many Aspies are on this board anyway. — Terrapin Station
"Hate speech causes violence" isn't saying anything different. No one would think that we're saying that it always causes violence or that it's the only cause or anything like that. — Terrapin Station
Says the guy who never seems to get that not everyone uses "proof" in the most strict of senses. — S
In philosophy we use "proof" in the stricter sense standardly. This is supposed to be a philosophy board. — Terrapin Station
Anyway, if you think that hate speech is sometimes a causal factor for violence, and it should be regulated because of that, why don't you think that video games, movies, etc. are sometimes are causal factor for violence that should be regulated because of that? — Terrapin Station
Obviously I reject the false premise of yours that I am my body, so any conclusions you draw from it are completely irrelevant as far as I'm concerned.
No, it doesn't, it just means that I think that I'm more than my body, which is a very widespread view which makes a lot of sense. My personality is not my body, for example.
They are, and I agree with that. — S
I said I understand that. There are autonomous functions over and above what you are talking about there, that are not governed or regulated. So even if you are right about subconscious and body regulated bodily functions, there are still functions which cannot be stopped except from damage or trauma.
If it is not your body, and not itself a body, where is this personality? It sounds like there is some reification going on here, giving solidity to pure wind. — NOS4A2
Yikes. Okay, at least that's consistent. Ridiculous, but consistent. — Terrapin Station
You said you were more than your body, and as an example you said your personality. I just want to know where this personality exists in space and time, where it begins and ends, what it is and what it looks like. I suspect these are questions you will not answer. — NOS4A2
Oh sure, sure. It's the status quo that's ridiculous, and not your fringe view. — S
I will answer once you've answered the question of what October tastes like.
Maybe that's the status quo in Australia, where people seem to be much more amenable to censorship, speech control, etc. In the U.S., the status quo is to think that it's ridiculous that people suggest that video games, films, etc. cause violence, and it's the fringe moral majority-type wackos who want to ban stuff. — Terrapin Station
I think I get it. Like the month October, “personality” is an abstract noun. So not only are you a body, but more, you are an abstract noun, or at least fit the definition of the abstract noun “personality”. — NOS4A2
if you think that hate speech is sometimes a causal factor for violence, and it should be regulated because of that, why don't you think that video games, movies, etc. are sometimes are causal factor for violence that should be regulated because of that?
in a crowded closed place with bottleneck type entrance and they cause death, it will have consequences in the court when the case is considered. It also falls under free speech.fire fire !!
Dude, just quote something in the paper that you believe amounts to a claim that hate speech is causal to violence. — Terrapin Station
You approach this stuff just like a fundie. — Terrapin Station
Do you also think that video games, movies, etc. can cause violence? Would you say that just about every psychologist in the world thinks those things are causal to violence? And if you don't think they're causal to violence, why not, when you think that hate speech is? — Terrapin Station
What is any evidence at all of a correlation between anyone saying "Gas the Jews" and an increase in violence? — Terrapin Station
I wasnt talking about speech, I was talking about liberties. — DingoJones
Answered earlier on. A cost-benefit analysis. — S
I was making a point about losing specific liberties of speech, not all liberties or people saying “gas the jews”. Again, very subtle dishonesty here. “Gas the jews” just happens to be something assholes can say when liberty of speech is granted. Free speech is about no one being able to control what other people are allowed to express. Its about ideas, and not suppressing them. — DingoJones
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