MrPopo wrote:Hatta wrote:Do what thou wilt, huh? Does that include hassling other people? Is a net increase in person hassling acceptable to you, if it means avoiding being hasseled yourself?
Yes. However, most of the time me hassling someone else will cause them to hassle me in return, so I don't engage in it.
Ah, so you have no problem with any and all kinds of atrocities, rape, murder, torture, etc., as long as you stand to benefit from it. Do I understand that correctly?
What if other people feel that it is acceptable for them to hassle you in order to avoid their own hasselment? Your philosophy, if adopted by others, may result in you being hasseled more often. Do you still advocate this philosophy? How can you do so consistently?
Indeed it might. Which would lead to me engaging in advocacy to get myself hassled less. No one is going to be 100% happy no matter what your philosophy is.
So you believe your philosophy is correct and beneficial, but it requires you to manipulate others and get them to disbelieve in your own philosophy (and therefore act against their own interests) in order to further yours. Just making sure I understand.
I think it's pretty clear that there is a universal morality. Human well-being is a measurable quantity. We can experimentally determine what makes humanity thrive. That is what is good.
No, there is no universal morality. You're using some very vague definitions such as "well being" and "thrive". How do we define a person's well being? Is it simply nutritional level and ability to procreate? A self assessment? (which people lie on all the time) And how do you define humanity thriving?
You can't tell when a human being is happy and healthy? Do you possess a complete lack of empathy? That would explain a lot actually.
We already know what makes humans thrive. And we know that fear, hate, and ignorance are not among them. That is what makes people ban things like violent video games (and drugs, and homosexuality, and interracial marriage, and jazz music, and pornography, and hijabs, and so on. None of these things are anywhere near as dangerous as the people who seek to ban them).
Define "what makes humans thrive", since right there all I see is "What makes Hatta happy".
That was not a list of things that make humans thrive. That was a list of things that have been banned for no reason besides moral panic. I was trying to show how we've banned things in the past based on emotion, and then realized that it was wrong to do so. We should consider that before we ban things in the future.
But since you asked, food, water, and shelter are a good start. Strong social bonds are important, as is feeling that you make an appreciated contribution to society. We have an intuitive understanding of all this as humans (well most of us do), but we can also demonstrate this empirically by measuring things like cortisol levels.
Again, if you don't want something banned then you gotta speak out and say so. If the only people speaking are those who want something banned then it makes sense to ban it.
This is a wildly unsupported notion you have. Complaining is not a productive activity. Therefore if you run things based on the wishes of the complainers instead of the producers, you will have a less productive society. On the contrary, if you know a certain portion of your society is composed of vocal bigots who are always trying to ban things because they're ignorant and fearful it makes sense to require actual evidence that something is harmful before you ban it.
Also, I am speaking out. If you haven't noticed I speak out at every opportunity. If you want me to shut up about the War on Drug Users, write to your congressperson and get it ended.