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- Dec 4, 2017
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So are blonds! Cuties, all of them.Blondes are awesome.
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So are blonds! Cuties, all of them.Blondes are awesome.
I'll allow it.Are blondes allowed to be scientists - or ex-scientists at least?
Em
Can’t I be both?are you an ex-scientist or a sex scientist? I'm asking for Science, of course.
You are all, once again, talking about people who are part of those bullying minorities and not about reasonable people whose voice basically can't be heard due to the cacophony created by zealots on both sides. I am not saying censorship or anything like that. Actually, what some of those zealots are doing is censorship in a way.
I am saying let common sense and first of all science rule instead. If you claim calling you a "librarian" (silly example, but I can't be bothered thinking of something better) is offensive to you, then go ahead and make some reasonable case - prove that word, which we used for centuries, is somehow offensive.
What he saidNo, it isn't. They're simply telling you that if you use certain words, some people will think you're a dickhead. But to certain folk merely being criticised for their speech is "censorship".
How on earth does one scientifically "prove" that a word is offensive, other than by observing that it offends somebody? This is a nonsensical idea. Science is great but not everything is amenable to scientific methods.
You couldn't prove causality with the empirical method, however you could show correlation by paying a hobo to shout "You ... BRUNETTE!" at passerby's at random intervals regardless of age, gender, hair color, and then survey them further down the street. Both survey as observe and survey as ask questions.How on earth does one scientifically "prove" that a word is offensive, other than by observing that it offends somebody? This is a nonsensical idea. Science is great but not everything is amenable to scientific methods.
I see and hear things that offend me, but accept that my right to speak demands my acceptance of others’ own right to speak.
Even - maybe especially - when what they say offends me.
You couldn't prove causality with the empirical method, however you could show correlation by paying a hobo to shout "You ... BRUNETTE!" at passerby's at random intervals regardless of age, gender, hair color, and then survey them further down the street. Both survey as observe and survey as ask questions.
Fully agree, BT, but the thread had drifted from an optional setting on a common programme to cancel culture and scientific examination of offensive words.
Well, to be fair, there’s a difference between criticizing speech one finds offensive and making it impossible for the other person to speak. The former is hardly censorship, but refusing to allow another to speak most certainly is, IMO."Cancel culture" seems to be mostly about obfuscating that same distinction, though - reframing criticism of speech that offends somebody as censorship of it.
Generally agreed, but almost all supposed "cancel culture" ends up being the former rather than the latter, or variations on "you can speak but that doesn't entitle you to somebody else's microphone".Well, to be fair, there’s a difference between criticizing speech one finds offensive and making it impossible for the other person to speak. The former is hardly censorship, but refusing to allow another to speak most certainly is, IMO.
Aye, there’s the rub. Who gets to decide who ‘owns the microphone’? For, say, a university to forbid a campus group from hosting a controversial speaker is to my mind censorial.Generally agreed, but almost all supposed "cancel culture" ends up being the former rather than the latter, or variations on "you can speak but that doesn't entitle you to somebody else's microphone".
Aye, there’s the rub. Who gets to decide who ‘owns the microphone’? For, say, a university to forbid a campus group from hosting a controversial speaker is to my mind censorial.
I think Word is a bloated PoS and avoid it whenever possible, which is (almost) all the time. This is but another of many illustrations why.So Word has more options on the laptop for spelling and grammar. One that caught my eye was “inclusivity”. Now before I get flamed by one set of people and lauded by another, I’m pro-inclusivity. I’m pro-diversity. But…
They flagged “brunette” as not inclusive and suggested “brown haired”. Could I check with any - pause - brown haired folk out there whether or not they find “brunette” offensive?
Aye, there’s the rub. Who gets to decide who ‘owns the microphone’? For, say, a university to forbid a campus group from hosting a controversial speaker is to my mind censorial.
Yes. A university has a duty to provide an environment that allows academic and intellectual freedom, and that necessarily means creating a forum in which people may express views that some find offensive. If you do not support the right of people who disagree with you to speak, then you don't support freedom of speech. That concept is MUCH less obvious on university campuses in the USA today than it was when I was a student. It's not even close. I know this from talking with my kids who've just gone through school, and also with friends of mine from college who are now university professors. Cancel culture is a real thing. It doesn't always involve things like firing or expulsion. It can manifest itself through the heckler's veto, or shunning, or badgering people, insults, calling people names, physical or verbal assaults. Mere criticism is not cancel culture. But when you take steps that make it very difficult for others to express different views, and to face negative consequences for expressing those views, whether those views are professional or personal, yes, that's cancel culture. It is real. It is happening. The intellectual climate is very different today from what it was 40 years ago. I think it sucks.
Kind of you to demonstrate how easily it's done.lest we fall into equivocation.
Aye, there’s the rub. Who gets to decide who ‘owns the microphone’? For, say, a university to forbid a campus group from hosting a controversial speaker is to my mind censorial.