curating a collection of 'opinions from the Internet' — Isaac
Terrapin Station thank you very much for your response. I do like a respectful debate. I can give a very interesting source on how the majority smothers introverts. There's a free E-Book very easy to find online called "The power of introverts". The short conference by Susan Cain is also available on Youtube. It's about 48 minutes (and you can even put it at X1,25 speed to make it go faster). There's also the first part of the book available on Youtube. It's 6 hours long, and it's all worth it. — L Michaud
I'd have to dig for why I thought this, but I thought that re your "assuming the likelihood of broad conformity" you were talking about broad conformity re ethical normatives.
"Does not like to hold contradictory ideas" isn't an ethical normative, of course. — Terrapin Station
you weren't thinking that I was claiming something contradictory, were you? I'm pretty sure that you simply had a problem with me not holding something you take to be an ethical/normative commonality, holding something that you disagree with. — Terrapin Station
Well first of all, I'm not sure you can really understand all the implications of your own beliefs about free-speech. — L Michaud
Nowhere is there absolute free-speech. Nowhere. — L Michaud
All that said, a society where free-speech is absolute would need to systematically punish people when they disrespect the free-speech of others. — L Michaud
It was, but the point I'm making is not specific to ethical normatives, so I used a more obvious example, to make it clearer. — Isaac
Why would I assume a person was right — Isaac
2. In the absence of your elucidation, I've assumed some of those moral and rational beliefs on the basis of my experience with normal human beings. I've assumed them rather than asked, for the reasons I've already given. — Isaac
Well first of all, I'm not sure you can really understand all the implications of your own beliefs about free-speech. We are not even close, even in 2019, to a society where free-speech is absolute. So what it would look like can only be theorized.
Very interesting point of view. In fact, as I tried to say earlier in other terms, the problem are the censors themselves. If as Socrates suggested, there was a society with a philosopher in command, then if ever there was censorship, it should really be for the greater good. Not so a few can profit from the many, or to help them stay in power. But in today's society, we can't really advocate for censorship, cause most people in command can't be trusted. As Michael Jackson said, "They don't really care about us".
By the way, I've read that Norway hired a Philosopher as "moral compass" for the government in 2005. The guy is named Henrik Syse. It would be very interesting to see what came out of this surprising move. This is basically Socrates theory coming to life. Even if he's not the commander in chief. And likely not all his advice is systematically applied.
I just read a wiki page about him, and he is the son of a former prime minister (Jan P. Syse).
Could you describe what you think the overall effects on society would be if there really was pure freedom of speech in your kingdom? — L Michaud
Your last point (about not allowing violence in response to free speech) have me wonder about your definition of violence. Are you considering psychological violence? — L Michaud
That creates more problems than it solves.I believe the exact opposite, that one should always be skeptical about what others say. People are not to be trusted. — DingoJones
Do you mean people would be less likely to lie cause it would be harder for them to lie without getting caught? — L Michaud
absolute freedom to lie, with zero consequences ever. — L Michaud
Why--because that's what I asked for an example of (because that's what Isaac was talking about). What argument did I give? — Terrapin Station
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