rEvolutionist wrote:
An idea doesn't have to be associated with the mind that is proposing it. I could be offering the idea that someone else put forward.
Have you ever tried to do that? Whenever I try to do that, I always couch it in terms of "this is my interpretation of what x person's idea is". Unless I feel no need to quote x, in which case it is my idea. In both cases, the idea is actually mine.
An idea is different from a brick. We can point to a brick, and pass it round, and it stays the same. But an idea... that has to be interpreted, the interpretor has to create an understanding of it, and assimilate it into their consciousness, then disseminate it.
rEvolutionist wrote:You attacking that idea is in no way an attack on me.
Yeah that's the point of contention that we're debating. Asserting it again doesn't really add anything.
rEvolutionist wrote:You could, if you were taking this to the absurd limits that you seem to be, claim that this was an attack on the other person.
Well, I don't know what you mean by "this". Do you mean "this post"?
rEvolutionist wrote:And if you had of read the rest of my post you might have been able to avoid making the nonsense dualism mistake.

Sorry but I don't see that. Just because I only quoted the first clause doesn't mean I didn't read to the end. And when I read to the end of your post, I saw no argument against my assertion that this "idea-person" dualism borrows heavily from the dualistic "realm of God-realm of man" dualism.
I'm just not seeing much rational argument here supporting the "attack the idea, not the person" doctrine. The only arguments seem to be couched in terms of the original question. It's no good saying "one is a living being, the other is a concept" because "living being" is just another word for "person" and "concept" is just another word for "idea".
It's no good saying "it's a logical fallacy" unless the logic is explained.
It's my contention that an idea can only exist in the consciousness of a living being. It's not a static thing like a brick. Therefore to attack an idea is to attack a part of a person. If people think it's ok to attack a part of a person as long as it's not the whole of a person, then I can't do much about that. If someone says it's not okay to attack me all over but it's all right to stamp on my toe, then that's just an ideology I'd have to accept. It's crap, but when in Rome you can't kick against the pricks, as they say.
Trouble is, that's the level this discussion is being held on. There's very little rational justification going on. Very little rationalia here. Just a rewording of the original assertion with words that can be found in a thesaurus followed by some vaguely insulting snottiness. It's just silly.