In posts like this, you imply that the right answer hinges on a consensus. But in other posts, you make it clear that if your view isn't the same as the consensus, the consensus is wrong. — Terrapin Station
And that's why broad agreement is useful — S
I don't assume that something that seems like a contradiction to me both (a) would seem like a contradiction to the person who said it, and (b) is something that the person would think they should avoid (just in case it would seem like a contradiction to them). — Terrapin Station
I don't automatically assume that people are morons who are posting something they just came up with two minutes ago. — Terrapin Station
Seriously, you're either extremely dishonest, extremely moronic, or there's something seriously wrong with you re a mental illness. — Terrapin Station
If the person can't or won't respond to questions in good faith, then I might change my tune — Terrapin Station
He was saying that assuming widely accepted ethical normatives was useful for having an ethics discussion in a philosophy context. — Terrapin Station
Your whole position here has not been "really, you think hate speech should be banned, how interesting, tell me more... ", it has from the start been "if you can't show me the exact evidence I count as acceptable, using the rule-making methodology I approve of, you're a moron". I don't mind that approach, I prefer people who have some passion behind their philosophy, but it's disingenuous to paint this 'curious curator of ideas' picture just to support your position here. You're just as passionate about telling everyone what's 'right' as the rest of us. — Isaac
Yes, and my example shows that. — S
But your position in any discussion must surely be based on whether you think there's a contradiction, and whether you think it should be avoided. — Isaac
Glad I manged to make an exception to your general rule... — Isaac
I have no idea where you think you showed that. And again, his comment was in the context of someone stating an argument. — Terrapin Station
I didn't state any arguments, a fortiori because I don't even believe there are true or false ethical utterances. — Terrapin Station
No idea why you'd think I'd even have a "position" in a discussion... — Terrapin Station
No idea why you'd think I'd even have a "position" in a discussion, much less one based on whether I think there's a contradiction. — Terrapin Station
The second part you quoted wasn't an automatic assumption. It was a comment made after interacting with you many times.
That you're the sort of person who routinely can't manage things like discerning the difference between an "automatic assumption" and a comment made after interacting with you many times is part of what motivated the second comment. — Terrapin Station
Well, the evidence of my own experience, for a start. Ar you telling me you don't have a 'position' in this discussion. That if I did a quick poll now asking "what is Terrapin's position on free speech?" the majority of people reading this thread would answer "we haven't a clue, Terrapin doesn't really seem to have a 'position' on this one"? — Isaac
If I ran a second poll asking people whether they thought you'd expressed any 'position' on the opposite view regarding whether it was consistent, rational etc, you think I'd get a similar answer — Isaac
I think it's obvious to anyone that you have a 'position' in this, and any other discussion, and that that 'position' extends to, quite bombastically, pointing out what you think are flaws in the opposing arguments. — Isaac
what definition of racism are you using? — Hassiar
Do let's continue this as my favorite sidebar though: discussing how to discuss things, with an emphasis on criticism of how I discuss things, as if that's going to lead to me discussing things any differently than I do. — Terrapin Station
Was your position in this part of the discussion based on whether you think there was a contradiction? — Terrapin Station
Yes. Put (very) simply I believe that you cannot rationally hold an absolutist position about free speech, and also a concern for the welfare of those around you without contradiction. — Isaac
For example, I think that people should often enough be potentially subject to, and should often enough subject themselves to, things that they do not like, things that they would rather were different, etc. — Terrapin Station
It's kind of patronizing to think that someone has the view they have due to probably not thinking about the consequences of it. Rather, they probably would disagree with you whether the consequences are acceptable or even desirable. — Terrapin Station
If you're not going to state what the supposed argument is, etc., there's nothing I can do about it. — Terrapin Station
Re the "position comment," if he's just stating that we're going to give opinions, express views, stances, etc. okay, but that would be a weird way to state that, especially in the context of "must be based on whether you think there's a contradiction," which just reads like gibberish to me. — Terrapin Station
So your claim is what? You were just born that way? This feeling just popped into your head one day? Because I think the same as you, but I quite clearly think it because toughness is a virtue which I have good reason to believe will lead to a society of people better of than otherwise. Ie we still get down to the vague notion of a 'better' society. — Isaac
So you're telling me that you're incapable of remembering or looking up your own argument from earlier on in the discussion about throwing rocks off of a building? (Assuming that's what you're referring to, since you didn't quote me in your reply). — S
So why are you choosing to interpret it in a way that reads like gibberish? — S
That's based on the fact that anyone could find anything conceivable not to their liking, and it would be impossible to control/put sanctions on everything everyone had a problem with — Terrapin Station
I wouldn't call my stance on free speech a "position in the discussion"... — Terrapin Station
Which is an empirical claim and so subject to counter-argument. — Isaac
Have you conducted or read a survey of "everything people don't like" to see how many different things there would actually turn out to be? — Isaac
It also contains a logical claim (a known fallacy in fact) that a direction on a scale includes all points of that scale (slippery slope fallacy). — Isaac
There's no logical link between legislating against some perceived harms and legislating against all perceived harms. — Isaac
Plus, why would that be a moral normative at all? — Isaac
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