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(The Fat's Sabobah)
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#22 |
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Little Chief Hare
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and to me, the word "enabled" implies causation, making your entire position a huge ****ing equivocation. Oh, but no, you look at causation backwards, observing first the effects and then deducing causality where it isn't. And why do you do this? Naturally because when you see effects you don't like, you have to search for causes which also offend your majesties royal, divinely substantiated sensibilities.
I'm not the one putting things in the wrong order. All actions have consequences, but not all, no, not any actions have consequences which extend to infinity. Some actions carry far, others carry very short. Thoughts and internal decisions don't contain an element of external causality. If you flinch at your inability to find a convergence between emotion and reality, get the fuck over yourself. Last edited by Kilroy_x; 05-30-2007 at 10:47 PM.. |
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#23 |
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Little Chief Hare
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#24 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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Just as I was talking to a friend of mine about how much I was enjoying the discussion, and how even if I disagreed with your position, I could understand how and why you might think that way, you had to go and do the whole "10 year old, only with a better vocabulary" thing you get criticized for so often in here.
Look, this is the situation: Call it what you will (and you will) but I simply cannot see how you can be in a situation, and have the ability to simply -make- the situation happen or not happen, and sit there and tell yourself "I didn't let it happen, it would have happened anyway, in absolutely no way is this something that has to do with me" To me -that- is an equivocation to make people who are too afraid to actually intervene in a situation feel better about themselves. "I -could- have stopped it, but I decided not to" I really can't see how you could possibly argue that someone in such a situation has -absolutely no- responsibility for the consequences of their electing not to intervene. It's a coward's way to justify apathy and non-involvement. As soon as you can effect a situation you are -in- the situation, how you elect to -act- within that situation is up to you, but if your chosen action -in- the situation is to do nothing to stop it, you have acted and are responsible for the consequences of that action. You are standing on the sidewalk, a child is standing on the curb, and from up the nearby hill, you can see a car rolling down the hill directly towards the child. The child is in arms reach, it is a trivial action to grab his arm and pull him to safety. You can see that he doesn't notice the car, and that if you do nothing, the car will hit and crush the child. You decide "I'm going to let nature take its course" and the car hits the child and crushes him to death. I simply am incapable of understanding an outlook that would make you then say "Well, I didn't change anything, -none- of that is the -slightest- bit of my fault" |
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#25 | |||||
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Little Chief Hare
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How could I afford not to be arrogant, out of 6 billion people I'm the closest one to actually seeing the world.
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Last edited by Kilroy_x; 05-30-2007 at 11:15 PM.. |
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#26 |
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FFR Hall of Fame
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What isn't causal?
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#27 |
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Little Chief Hare
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Thoughts. Or rather, whatever element of causality is contained in thoughts doesn't extend into the realm of interpersonal relationships or effective physical actions, including simple vocalization of thoughts, without additional action or otherwise expenditure of energy.
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#28 |
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FFR Hall of Fame
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You're reaching way too hard here.
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#29 |
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Little Chief Hare
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Do you have an actual criticism, or do you just find something repulsive about the amount of effort you believe I put into the last response?
Well, either way I'm going to bed. I'll either hear more argument/whining tommorow, V~ Last edited by Kilroy_x; 05-31-2007 at 12:03 AM.. |
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Very Grave Indeed
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If, for example, a government decides to maintain a standing law, they are viewed as having made an -active- -responsible- decision...that has no direct causal effect on the way things had been previously. The law existed, they elected to not remove it, but they are held responsible for the consequences of the upholding of that law. Being the 1 in 6 billion unique person that you are, you'll no doubt point out that there are all kinds of trivial laws on the books since days of yore which have never been removed, but which people simply acknowledge as being non-entities as far as considering them or paying them heed is concerned, but since your stance is one that says there is -never- a case as described in which your belief fails to apply, even if you appeal to millions of cases where you are correct, I need have only one where I am. This leads back to where you openly criticized me for having vague and ambiguous terms. Well, your stance is one of 'zero' and my stance is one of 'non-zero' as any mathematician will tell you, the actual size of the non-zero is completely irellevant when just comparing 0 and !0. Quote:
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#31 | |
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event x occurs I do something event y occurs Why put so much special exclusivity on to negative cases Did you see how many commas and subordinate clauses it took you to try to get to something that wasn't causal. It should've taken you an infinite number more because you still didn't get there and you never will.
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Last edited by aperson; 05-31-2007 at 12:30 AM.. |
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#32 | |
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(The Fat's Sabobah)
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Better yet, say a person is driving and down the road is a child in the middle of the street. The child isn't moving out of the way and the person decides not to brake or swerve out of the way. The person hits the child and the child dies. By your logic, the person is not guilty of killing the child. |
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#33 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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Ah but see, he claims that his logic applies only in cases where somehow magically going back in time and removing you from the situation could happen without any change in effect. Like...if you went back and removed the driver from that situation the child woudln't die, thus the person did in fact have a casual effect on what happened.
However, such a thing is impossible, and I still see a case where you had the action of changing course, and the inaction of not changing course, both of which carry consequences for which you are at least somewhat responsible. |
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#34 | |||||||
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Little Chief Hare
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No. Back-handed compliments are more of a literary device anyways.
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The death could be considered either suicide or manslaughter, but we all know what it will be considered, don't we? |
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#37 |
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Little Chief Hare
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You're entitled to be wrong, but at least you understand my position to some level.
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#38 |
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FFR Hall of Fame
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No, negative cases to you are positive cases to another person; the concepts of actions are all relevant notions that pivot around your cognitive biases. You can't even define what inaction is because of this, and your failure to do that shows when you start trying to jump circles around Jewpin's point. Quit trying to back up your arguments with a bunch of junk philosophy that 'big men' like Kant have thrown around, too. It makes you look like a sophist when you apply their reasoning without even having a firm substrate. Since you aren't grasping the depth of what I'm saying, you can't come up with anything better than some canned response like "Because it applies." No it doesn't, and I've shown you three times over now why it doesn't. But instead, you've chosen to stick your fingers in your ears and shout the same stuff over and over as loudly as you can. As human beings, we are woven together in a beautifully intricate network of causality. Everything we do affects others with infinite magnitude, but our computational and perceptual limitations keep us from ever recognizing this (just like a butterfly flapping its wings...). Quit pigeonholing yourself into the most basic grasps at causality by arguing like you are; you're never going to see the beauty of the big picture if you do. Instead, you're making a threshold argument; you're saying that somewhere along the gradient of perceived causal manipulability, things slip from a semantic label of 'action' to one of 'inaction.' I'm fine with this concept, but for god's sake, at least be aware that you're doing this. Posts like your response to my "What isn't causal?" question demonstrate just how blind to what you're doing you actually are. You're seeing things in black in white instead of a spectrum. Stop.
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Little Chief Hare
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Or, to simplify how Montaigne put it, "A man can only be held accountable within the limits of his means." Thoughts are within the realm of means. At the same time, means can only be determined as an absolute based on whether or not any given action was taken, meaning if someone doesn't take a given action there's no way to prove that action was within their means. Last edited by Kilroy_x; 05-31-2007 at 12:46 PM.. |
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You're right, it isn't a refutation but it dismembers most of your pathetic arguments above. Quote:
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Well I'll be damned, there's the negation of your claim worded as a similar positive. Funny how that works. Wrench your brain really, really hard with some far transfer skills and maybe you can fathom how this applies to my original arguments. Hold on, I'll probably have to make it black and white for you: Here's a direct example of the relativity of positive and negative I was talking about earlier. Haha jesus christ, you said this and can't even notice what is going on. Also, it's hilarious as hell that you're arguing against causality with scientific empricism when every single bit of scientific discovery ever made pretty much underlies the notion that events occur as causal phenomenon. You should really listen to some of the crap you're saying some time. And beyond that, your argument boils down to some thought process analogous to the thought an ostrich makes when it runs away from fear by sticking its head in a hole; well if I can't see it, it can't be there: "That's great, but it doesn't mean anything because any conjecture on the causal or non-causal nature of reality beyond that threshold is untestable." Nice one, you call my stance empty postmodernism then do the exact same thing. You're brilliant, man. This is A+ sophistry right here. Quote:
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But you know what, YOU'RE RIGHT! Now maybe you can understand that you are making an arbitrary threshold argument. You're trying to set a JND (I'm namedropping psychology terms now) on where intentful causality occurs. And you're setting this threshold through some nonsensical view based on your cognitive biases on what denotes a positive action versus a negative (I mean this in the sense of A and ~A, not in the sense of good and bad). Quote:
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