I'm not going to be able to get why they're so drawn to consensuses, to a point where they think they're correct/incorrect and have normative weight (at least when it suits them (in S's case)), and why they can't see that the latter part of that is fallacious, and they're not going to get why I'm "perversely" denying the normative importance of consensuses. — Terrapin Station
I have no Idea why you'd think that. — S
f you don't even understand what's wrong with allowing a proposition like, "All crimes beginning with 'm' should be legalised", to pass through your moral system, — S
Because to me, it's what you seem to be doing. — Terrapin Station
It's partially because you can't articulate what your actual views are very well, at least in any detail. — Terrapin Station
Going off on a big tangent about my comments, my motivations for posting what/how I post on boards like this, etc. does nothing to answer the question I asked about something you said. — Terrapin Station
So, assuming the likelihood of broad conformity is useful in discussions like this in your opinion because of what? What's the usefulness? — Terrapin Station
The alternative is that discussions like this get dominated by teasing out the whole web from one oddball, or we don't really have anything to discuss. — Isaac
1. The purpose of discussions like these is for your interlocutors to spot flaws in your argument, either for sport, for genuine persuasion (for those that think such a thing might work), or to simply act as editors and proofreaders to help hone argumentative skills.
2. Moral arguments such as the ones of yours I used as examples, are not isolated arbitrary policy opinions. They are connected by rational inference to other feelings, concepts etc. Therefore one of the flaws that can be spotted is something claiming to be a rational inference which is not, or one which is poorly expressed.
3. It is impractical (maybe even impossible) for a person to lay out their whole Web of beliefs prior, or even during, a discussion like this.
Therefore, to carry out 1 in a moral discussion, where the only errors are rational inferences between ideas, it makes sense to assume a relatively broad 'normal' range of beliefs at 2 because of the impracticality at 3. Especially as one is very likely to be broadly right in such an assumption.
The alternative is that discussion like this get dominated by teasing out the whole Web from one oddball, or we don't really have anything to discuss. — Isaac
They start out within a web of rational justification and only when other people start to pick at the strands does it deteriorate into "that's just how I feel". — Isaac
What would be a moral argument where it would be useful to assume the likelihood of broad conformity, and then give an example of how the discussion would proceed so that the assumption was useful. If you can give a good example, maybe you'll persuade me. — Terrapin Station
I very much doubt you'd be persuaded, or act as though you are, even if he provides a really good example. An example that's highly relevant here would be that consequences like the ones you dismissed earlier matter. I recall you earlier on dismissing a situation where someone couldn't even walk down a street because some thugs were throwing rocks off of a building. That would be a consequence of your stance regarding the law, and your response was basically that that wouldn't matter. It shouldn't be illegal. You shouldn't be able to call the police to intervene, or if you do, they should just say, "Sorry, this isn't a police matter. No laws are being broken".
In reality, all that really means is that you're abnormal, and that we shouldn't take your wild ideas seriously. — S
That's not actually what I said in that part, but I don't want to focus on that. You're not understanding what I'm asking for. I'm asking for an example of an argument someone could give where it's useful (and then explain how it's useful) to assume the likelihood of broad conformity,
Presumably I wouldn't be a good example, because how would it be useful to assume the likelihood of broad conformity in the context of my comments about ethics/morals? — Terrapin Station
Looking for a concrete example. A fictional one is fine. — Terrapin Station
What? Anyway, I knew this would be pointless with you. — S
Because I'm skeptical about what's being claimed. — Terrapin Station
Showing a concrete example of how it would be useful would help convince me. — Terrapin Station
I've given you one. — S
First, did I even give an "argument" for the stance of mine you're taking to be an example? — Terrapin Station
Yes. Why? — S
In my view, yes. I'm a free speech absolutist.
I don't agree that speech can actually cause violence. People deciding to be violent causes violence. — Terrapin Station
could you give at least a fictional example of how you think this would work for usefulness? — Terrapin Station
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