Simple, we all have our own beliefs reinforced by such an arrangement.I think it's a win-win. — Noblosh
How? — Noble Dust
all cocaine users are addicted on the first hit — Noble Dust
Porn is the same, I look at it every so often but it's not a obsession, there's probably only a small percentage of people that are porno-maniacs, most of us can self-regulate. — Sivad
I'm not in favor of banning stuff just because a small minority can't control themselves. — Sivad
You base your personal assessment of porn use off your personal use of coke, then? — Noble Dust
Can you sniff cocaine and not be addicted? — Agustino
That's like squaring the circle pretty much. Two sado-masochists can claim they enjoy cutting each other up, that ain't makin' it true. A cannibal's victim can claim they enjoy being eaten - that ain't makin' it true either.If someone is looking for a hookup, it means not just searching for someone who says "Yes," but someone else who wants to have sex with them. The goal is not for them to "get some." It's to engage in an act which benefits the well-being of someone else. — TheWillowOfDarkness
In either case, you're an outlier then. Cocaine is known to be one of the drugs that produces addiction very quickly.Yes. Don't forget that I've been a professional musician for a long time. I've done a lot of drug experimentation. — Terrapin Station
In either case, you're an outlier then. Cocaine is known to be one of the drugs that produces addiction very quickly. — Agustino
Exactly, so cocaine is inherently addictive, something that can be proven chemically. So is porn. Of course there are exceptions, but these are just exceptions, not the rule.Yeah, I'd not argue that people don't more often get addicted. I don't know what the percentage would be, and I don't know if anyone knows that. It's something it's difficult to get data for. I've seen plenty of both sides--people who did it a bit and had no problem with it, and people who had a huge problem with it. — Terrapin Station
But I don't think you're wrong, I just think you're not right. — Noblosh
I got the concept slightly wrong... the idea I meant to convey is that the passions are forms of emotional suffering.But what's their purpose? Are they some kind of anomaly? Don't they serve any function? — noblosh
I would think that the purpose of emotional suffering would be to propel us toward things that aren't harmful... and toward things that don't cause suffering.
Distress is an irrational contraction, or a fresh opinion that something bad is present, at which people think it right to be depressed.
Fear is an irrational aversion, or avoidance of an expected danger.
Lust is an irrational desire, or pursuit of an expected good.
Delight is an irrational swelling, or a fresh opinion that something good is present, at which people think it right to be elated.
From all I know about the porn industry, there's nothing that confirms what you're claiming.How does that work? — Noble Dust
Like any other activities or substances that give a rush of dopamine, e.g. extreme sports and sweets.so cocaine is inherently addictive, — Agustino
Correct. And that it's not coincidence that large scale agreement occurs has absolutely no bearing on whether ethical judgments are entirely subjective. — Terrapin Station
Intersubjectivity doesn't amount to anything aside from the fact that people can agree with each other from a behavioral perspective. In other words, Joe can say, "I feel it's morally wrong to disagree with anything Terrapin Station says" and Bob can say, "Yes, I agree." Intersubjectivity amounts to nothing more than that.
Moral judgements are entirely subjective. — Terrapin Station
but it is because we are objectively such-and-such — Sapientia
No, I reject your definition. — Sapientia
Okay, that's fine, but that's what I'm referring to. Subjectivity conventionally refers to, for example, "(Philosophy) relating to or of the nature of an object as it is known in the mind as distinct from a thing in itself," and what that amounts to is a brain functioning in mental ways. "Subjectivity" isn't a synonym for "opinion" in the sense of "I like dark clothes." "I like dark clothes" is subjective, because it's a mental phenomenon, but your perception is subjective, too, and that's nothing like an opinon a la "I like dark clothes." — Terrapin Station
What I'm saying is that morality is strictly something that individual brains do, and that's all I'm saying (in saying that it's subjective). — Terrapin Station
What about caffeine? It has withdrawal symptoms, therefore it's also addictive! So everyone should definitely stop drinking sweet coffee, ever! — Noblosh
Only the "what it's like" of perception is subjective, and perception is much more than that. — Sapientia
but I think that morality encompasses more than just that, and that it includes objectivity, — Sapientia
I think that "objectification" concepts are nonsensical — Terrapin Station
ah, the I-don't-understand-it-so-it-must-be-bullshit-even-though-other-reasonable-people-get-it stance — WhiskeyWhiskers
That definition doesn't specify that, though, and neither do other conventional definitions of the subjective/objective distinction. — Terrapin Station
Since you use "objectivity" differently than I do, I'm guessing you're referring to facts about brain functioning here? — Terrapin Station
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