@[email protected] to Ask [email protected]English • 1 month agoYou read an article, written by somebody you never met, accusing a person you never met, citing evidence you never saw. Now you feel angry at the accused person. What does that make you?message-square42fedilinkarrow-up116
arrow-up116message-squareYou read an article, written by somebody you never met, accusing a person you never met, citing evidence you never saw. Now you feel angry at the accused person. What does that make you?@[email protected] to Ask [email protected]English • 1 month agomessage-square42fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish4•1 month agoWhat’s the minimum you’d count as strong enough evidence to justify anger at the accused?
minus-square@[email protected]OPlinkfedilinkEnglish1•1 month ago(Disregard that pm, wrong community) The word of an authority that I respect would do it.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink3•1 month ago“an authority that you respect”? So truth doesnt matter, just the status of the person stating it? You should rethink your values
minus-square@[email protected]OPlinkfedilinkEnglish1•1 month agoI said that the word of an authority that I respect would do it. And by “do it” I meant (in reply to [email protected]) that it would justify anger at the accused. That’s pretty far from truth. It’s putting my trust in an authority.
What’s the minimum you’d count as strong enough evidence to justify anger at the accused?
(Disregard that pm, wrong community)
The word of an authority that I respect would do it.
“an authority that you respect”? So truth doesnt matter, just the status of the person stating it? You should rethink your values
I said that the word of an authority that I respect would do it.
And by “do it” I meant (in reply to [email protected]) that it would justify anger at the accused.
That’s pretty far from truth. It’s putting my trust in an authority.