PLAYER57832 wrote:There are people who are obtuse, who refuse to try to understand "the other" (whatever the other position/person is). They see any difference as inherently a justification for attack. But, to descend to their level makes you no different from them.
I agree that leaving/ostracizing is the only answer. however, today, we often don' really have that option. Look at, for example, the whole Palestinien/Israeli conflict. To reach peace, each side is going to HAVE to sit down and actually listen to the other side. Icrispybits wrote:Constantly bending over backwards trying to hold reasonable discussions with these people moves their ideas into the realm of "things which are open to debate/discussion", and there should be certain ideas and philosophies that have been found to be harmful to society that should carry sanctions.
These cases are VERY few and far between. It is only by continually engaging and confronting the wrong idea that we can both stifle it and also be sure that we ourselves have not become complacent in our ideas.
-- I could go on, but I gotta go.
Snipped a bit because pretty much everything I disagree with is within this quote (not to say I agree with everything else, but the crystallised points are within this)
I actually kind of agree that there are situations where this is not effective (and you'll notice I've stopped in the evolution thread because the experiement wasn't showing any effect). When the claimant of the harmful idea has anonymity is one such situation. UC or shickingbrits or any of the other creatards have effectively no real sanction from anything that happens here. If Dave from Texas or Bob from Ohio (just random names/places, not trying to identify those two in the real world) was putting their real name and their actual reputation behind these ideas it would be different. If one of your biology scientist friends went online with a moniker that didn't identify them they could spout all sorts of crap about why evolution is flawed because the bible says so, macro-evolution vs micro-evolution, etc etc and there would be precisely no feedback into their actual lives. If they stood up with their real name on their name badge in a conference and did the same there would be real sanctions. Nobody would take them seriously as a scientist ever again.
The Palestine/Isreal thing is a good example for my point. It's escalating precisely because the rest of the world that isn't invested in either side isn't standing up and ostracising (at least intellectually/morally) those involved. If India, Japan, Australia, South Africa, Nigeria, Brazil, etc etc (i.e. all those countries not invested) all stood up as one and said "you know what - all YOU on this side are being ridiulous about THIS, and all YOU on that side are being ridiculous about THAT, and unless you both drop the ridiculousness and start having the discussions based on the things that all of us agree are valid we're going to exclude you from being allowed to have any influence on these things. What you have there is a real world example where there is no sanction being applied by global society for the stupid philosophies/ideas of either side. What those sanctions could be is another discussion entirely but the basic point is that the Israelis and the Palestinians are "allowed" by global society to keep spouting their ridiculous ideas and there's no negative feedback other than from those they consider as enemies. At least on the internet there's (usually) a moderator, in that situation we're not even supplying that, and that's a failure of global society.
On your last point, please note that I have never said our first resort should be to ostracise/insult. I've said that we should initially try to explain reasonably why any given idea is wrong, and allow counter-arguments. I advocate ostracising and insults only when those espousing the harmful idea fail to act reasonably by listening to the other side, by taking into account evidence for the other side, analysing it and identifying the precise bits and pieces that may show us that this idea is wrong or right and by acting honestly in that analysis. For example "gay sex is immoral" could be espoused by someone. When challenged on that they could be asked to define what they consider as moral/immoral and why and what it is precisely about gay sex that makes it fit those criteria either way. Say there is a definitional problem, their definition of what makes something immoral has a flaw, we should point that flaw out to them. If they refuse either to present an argument that counters that objection, then we should try in every way we know to make the objection clear to them. Having tried everything we know to explain why their philosophy is flawed and they still refuse to adapt their argument, and just keep going back to that initial argument that "gay sex is immoral because ...." ignoring our objections then they should simply be removed from the conversation. We can't shut them up by force (and we shouldn't be able to imo, free speech is too valuable to take away from people), but we can make it very clear that we think they're idiots, AND we should continue to say WHY we think they're idiots. Like I said not "you idiot" or "you idiot you're wrong" but "you idiot you're wrong and here's why (again)". Only once they actually come up with an argument which addresses the "and here's why" bit should they be allowed back into the serious conversation the rest of the world is having about that topic.