By that same token, if everyone just abides by those rules we like, and ignore the rest, we may as well not have rules. Nevertheless, what I'm saying is that the rule is fine in principle, but the Devil is in how the rule is applied. If it is applied unfairly, then it will be a problem, and there is plenty of room for it to be applied unfairly. If, however, care is taken in its application, then the rule should be the no-brainer rachaelbean described.tuco wrote:Yes that is favourite discipline of some. Point out what they believe to be fallacies of some kind.
If you make argument: rule is rule .. we should all try to abide by it .. the proper response is Auschwitz because its bullshit argument. It does not hold at all. If everyone abide by rules at all times like you suggest we still climb trees.
The only justifications for rules on the site are anecdotes. The rules are based on experience, and the folks making the rules are trying to implement what works to make the site enjoyable and at the same time preserving free and open discussion, humor and such.tuco wrote:
The problem is, and I repeat myself for X-time, that the only proper response which would be: this rule is necessary because .. cannot be made without resorting to anecdotes as its not possible to run two models at the same time and compare.
You are aware that this forum has a good deal of experience tinkering with rules, suspending them, enforcing them, etc. I think they even had a section for a while where there were no rules at all.tuco wrote:
Solution would be to suspend the rule, for period of time long enough, then analyse results. But that would be adult and intelligent. Then educated decision could be made.
You really need to can it with this nonsense about "that would be adult and intelligent," implying that the people who run this site are neither of those things. Your position is one of complete ignorance of the efforts made by this forum to adjust rules, and even suspend rules. You don't know what you're talking about, and yet you never stop pretending that you have some highmindedness that everyone else seems to lack.
Well, personal attacks are prohibited because a personal attack, including but not limited to ad hominem fallacies, have little to no probative value in connection with a discussion. They don't further a discussion, they do not make a point, etc. They are also "off topic" because a personal attack is not generally related to a topic which isn't about the person being attacked. They also tend to be "derails" because they move the discussion from the issue in the OP, to different direction.tuco wrote:
This is made up bullshit:
How its rational? Show your working out.Such a rule is certainly enforceable and rational.
The forum doesn't want to have rules against all off topic discussion and derail discussions, because it's hard to separate humor and banter from those categories. They want to have room for people to breathe. Remember "Liberty is the soul's right to breathe, and when it cannot take a long breath, laws are girdled too tight. Without liberty, man is a syncope." -- Henry Ward Beecher.
So, the forum wants people to be able to engage in broad discussion, without being too tied down with formal discussions.
So, why are personal attacks different than general banter and humor? Well, for a couple of reasons - personal attacks tend to raise the defensiveness of the person being attacked. It's like "You're an asshole!" and then the other person will want to respond via the concept of the right of self-defense. So, now you've got basically a shouting match. You can't really justify not allowing a person who is attacked the right to respond; otherwise, it places the power in the wolf, and tells the sheep he must endure the wolf quietly. So, the forum decides that attacking people personally is not worth allowing, because it hurts the overall mission of the site, which is to allow fun, humorous and serious discussion on a wide variety of issues to take place in a free and open environment. Allowing personal attacks actually hurts the ability of the site to maintain such an environment.
The proof of this is in experience. Over the years, the site has experienced incidents of personal attacks, like the ones that just happened with Seth, and it seems pretty consistent that personal attacks reduce the quality of discussion, reduce the quality of humor and reduce the quality of general banter and nonserious discussions. It hurts friendships. Creates discord. And, ends up ruining the forum for a lot of people.
The two kinds of personal attacks under discussion are the direct attack -- like "You, Forty Two, are a complete and utter jerk." Everyone pretty much agrees that a blatant namecalling event like that is a personal attack of no probative or discussion-related value, and of no entertainment value. It can only serve, experience tells us, to have Forty Two either lay down and take it, or respond with personal attacks of his own. Neither of those results is good for the forum.
The other kind that we're now talking about is the indirect insult, where, say, someone insults a group, but the person they are addressing is a member of that group, so that the personal attack goes against that individual by implication of the insult to the group. It would be like someone participating in the discussion who is a Marxist, avowed and open, card-carrying Marxist. So, during a discussion, someone may get upset and say "You goddamn Marxists are such maniacs, they want to line every dissenter up against walls and shoot them -- such murderous cunts these Marxists." So now, the rule is going to consider that kind of thing, as I understand it, a personal attack, because the attack on Marxists also attacks the individual Marxist who is a member of the forum. (the moderators can correct me if I'm wrong).
It makes sense and is rational for the same reasons as I noted for personal attacks in general.
It is much more difficult to enforce, however, because inevitably the word "you" is going to be dropped off of this, but the attack will remain. We will see how the moderators handle that. Because without the "you" -- all someone really has to say is that they don't mean "all" Marxists, and then it's less of a direct implication, even though there will be times when we know what the guy means.
So, to me, it's not a good road to go down, but if that's the rule they are announcing, then I do think it is the responsibility of the members to try to obey that rule. That doesn't mean I think people should follow orders to march people to gas chambers, and the idea that you are claiming to be the "adult" in these conversations, yet you advance such fatuous and vacuous arguments as "oh, you think we should obey forum rules -- then you must support obeying orders to send people to gas chambers to die horrible deaths...." is remarkable. Please don't ever claim to be the intelligent, reasonable, or adult contributor to conversations when you can, with a straight face, put forth such nonsense.
