That in itself is laughable, because you could just as well be looking at your own reflection. — S
Your ego leads you to your free speech fundamentalism. — S
Do you still maintain that you don't know whether or not I believe I'm on the moon? — S
Do you still maintain that the meaning of words is entirely subjective? — S
Are you actually endorsing that?Why would that be in favor of my ego? Be a free speech absolutist means that I'm endorsing that people be allowed to call for my death, to commit slander/libel against me, etc. How is that in service to one's ego? — Terrapin Station
I'm not saying you can't invent them. I'm saying it's hugely significant to the process of normative discussions (like the one this thread is about) that no one ever has. — Isaac
it is of huge significance that there is not one single functioning alternative to the agreement about what length an inch is. — Isaac
It means that for normative discussions (say, teaching a child to measure, or how long we should make some timber component) we need not at all go into the fact that the length of an 'inch' is arbitrary. It would be a foolish sideline. — Isaac
I'm not someone who thinks that their preferences are correct just because they have them. — Terrapin Station
Why would that be in favor of my ego? Be a free speech absolutist means that I'm endorsing that people be allowed to call for my death, to commit slander/libel against me, etc. How is that in service to one's ego? — Terrapin Station
As I explained during that discussion, it depends on just what you're claiming, the context, etc. But in general, yes, anyone could potentially believe anything. — Terrapin Station
Yes, of course. — Terrapin Station
You don't use that word, and you're oh so humble as a result — S
No, I mean that you stubbornly think that you're right about your free speech fundamentalism in the face of much criticism. — S
So you don't maintain that the meaning of words is entirely subjective, then. You just said, "Yes, of course", which means, "No, of course not". — S
And you don't see the harm in that? — Shamshir
What's vague about death threats and slander?" is too vague to make generalizations about. — Terrapin Station
They're clearly malicious. — Shamshir
It's not that I don't use that word. I do not believe that my preferences are correct just because I have them. You're so far up your own derriere that you can't comprehend how that could be the case, though, I suppose. — Terrapin Station
Not in the slightest. — Terrapin Station
As if meaning were the same as the observable aspect of word usage. — Terrapin Station
Go ahead and threaten me with loving intent. — Shamshir
You do, though. I'm not reaching that conclusion from the rationalisations you're coming out with. — S
You don't think that free speech absolutism is right? Could've fooled me. Why are we arguing over it then? — S
I don't feel very loved when I'm threatened, so no - it couldn't. — Shamshir
How absurd do things have to get until we begin to think, "Hold on a minute, if this counts as philosophy, maybe I should find another hobby". Or is philosophy really all about someone saying ludicrous things, whilst others point out funny logical consequences, and have a good old laugh? — S
Ah, you conceded. About time! — S
Well, don't forget that I'd add that it's not incorrect, either. Correct/incorrect are a category error for this stuff. — Terrapin Station
I don't see how loving intent produces a threat, — Shamshir
But that's like saying that elevators don't go up or down, — S
No, it's not, because that wouldn't be a category error. — Terrapin Station
Why ever say 'I love you' when 'Kill yourself' with loving intent works the same, is that it? — Shamshir
But I'm using the same kind of justification as you are, — S
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