BalrogLord, on 01 May 2013 - 03:56 AM, said:
Silencer, on 01 May 2013 - 01:42 AM, said:
Easy answer, difficult to prove where that line is in practice, though. Let's take the use of the words "rights" seriously and put this under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as a broad-base, applies-to-all sort of thing.
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Rather then dogmatically reffering to the UDHR (which is a fine piece of legislation im sure) let's look at it from other view points
All fine and dandy, BL, but I believe the specific wording Studlock used was "rights". Not "morality", not "ethics", and not "philosophy". He clearly and specifically stated "rights". I.e. those things which have been enshrined in legislation as belonging to a person by virtue of their existence upon this planet, in order to protect them from the machinations of others. So bring up these wonderful(ly outdated) philosophers as a separate point by all means - but you, good sir, just committed the Red Herring Fallacy. Thanks for playing.
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There's the utilitarian criterion, notwithstanding the utilitarian calculator is impossible to use, but looking at it from the perspective of the utility gained from watching this kind of stuff vs the negative impacts of reinforcing negative gender stereotypes. Pretty sure your dis-utility would be greater.
Only if one looks at it from a surface level. Go a bit deeper and consider the validity of positive utility coming from people being able to analyse, reflect upon, and seek out new meanings or positions from the offerings of others! I also contend that the dis-utility of *censoring* artists, especially, say, those working on historical or thought-experimental settings, is
vastly greater than any perceived reinforcement of negative stereotypes - bear in mind that the world today (at least publicly) openly decries these practices in reality. Where does the reinforcement of (mostly decried) stereotypical depictions, let alone depictions which are stereotypical in nature but clearly deemed unwelcome by the work itself, gain so much power as to fight against the weight of public opinion on the balance of things?
If people are being reinforced by these stereotypes, I contend that it is unlikely that the problem is with the reinforcement, but rather with the people who hold these opinions - something which is considered to be a
fundamental human right for them to hold, regardless of how unpalatable it may be to everyone else.
And let me not forget to point out that the real fundamental flaw in the case for utilitarianism is not in the infeasibly complicated calculus - that's the practical concern - but rather in the inability for society as a whole to agree on what specifically increases or decreases utility, or indeed to what utility is most important!
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Sartre's freedom: by reinforcing negative stereotypes you are reducing the freedom of others. Therefore don't do it. (negative stereotype, affects relationships, women perceived as objects etc...)
By restricting creative expressionism you are reducing the freedom of others; therefore don't do it. (Did Sartre ever come up with a simple method to resolve such conflicts? I can't recall...)
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CI: Pretty sure women don't like being portrayed like that. .
Which is almost as bad as presuming that because *most* people don't want to be prostitutes, no-one should be able to - a classic sticking point for "extremist" feminists vs...several different groups. Or that voluntary euthanasia should not be permitted because one cannot conceive of a situation where a rational individual would wish to waive their (unreasonably) inalienable Right to Life (notwithstanding other arguments against it, of course, but just pointing out that this one is flawed). Or indeed, that we should never portray anything as being negative, ever, because that's just mean. >.> Wow, why don't we just wipe out the entertainment industry altogether while we're at it!?
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So i'd be inclined to say that we shouldn't be doing this sort of thing. Since we have several ethical criterions all saying the same thing well i think there's a definite issue here.
Several very flawed, not widely adopted, let alone universal ethical criteria which have little relevance to our day-to-day decision making. This almost falls under a fallacious Appeal to Authority, doesn't it?
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On a more practical level, freedom of speech is important, but it isn't sacrosanct, and it shouldn't be regarded as such. Freedom of speech helps ensure the functioning of a democratic society, which ultimately benefits the majority (utilitarianism another words), but there comes a point when freedom of speech doesn't help a whole Lotta people. Those westboro baptists camping out the funeral processions of dead soldiers, the spreading of hate based propaganda etc..., and encouraging negative behaviors. Now should this be censored? i'd say no because of the terrible precedent it would set, in short it's the practicality of such an act as well as the ramifications of those acts that outweigh the benefits. Vote with your wallet is the practical course of action to take. Perhaps even a boycott if such could be done.
Case in point: this is
precisely why the UDHR makes the exception in Article 7 that
inciting discrimination is something to which all people have legal protection against. Hate-based propaganda, I'm fairly certain, falls under that category.
So I'm not sure what you're actually arguing for in that closing paragraph - you say that there is this bad stuff which means freedom of speech shouldn't be sacrosanct, but then you go on to say that it still shouldn't be censored? So aside from the fact that this stuff falls outside of art, and into the "inciting discrimination" category, you STILL think people should be allowed to do this, but that we shouldn't allow negative stereotypes to be portrayed in art? O.o
I
love it when the discussion board gets interesting.