Obloquium wrote:Darth Wong wrote:Which would be a black/white fallacy, as was made quite obvious earlier when he tried to suggest that it's impossible to draw a line in the sand at any given point.
I did no such thing. I pointed out there was absolutely no basis behind YOUR demarcation. That is there is no universal agreement that the temporary pleasure of smoking is trumped by the objective risks except in the limit where the act is
In short, your argument is "I don't agree with your use of the relative term "stupid"". Well too bad, that's not a rebuttal. You claim that my use of the term is
wrong even though it
is a relative term; the burden of proof is on
you to support
your claim of an absolute valuation, not me.
Presumably for the same reason its within the rights of a firm to fire someone for smoking. That has nothing to do with your completely bogus claim that "smoking is stupid amounts to a fact." All you've done is:
1. Set up a completely bogus comparison of game between Russian Roulette and smoking (comparing a single trial of one to a lifetime of trials of the other).
That distinction is irrelevant to the logic of the analogy, hence your rebuttal is nothing but a red-herring fallacy.
2. Appealed to emotion by demanding I consider the very real harm of smoking the prima facie for declaring unwise any choice carrying a 1 in 3 chance of death and something like a 50% chance of debilitating injury as a result of longterm heavy smoking.
How is it an appeal to emotion to point out that you are engaging in a risky and harmful activity? Do you even know what an appeal to emotion is?
3. Proposed that objective costs trump subjective gain and only the stupid believe otherwise.
Correct, because that's true. If an objective cost can be said to be so small that it is insignificant that's fine, but when you are talking about something that kills in mass quantities, that objection simply does not apply, hence the reason for bringing up the life insurance companies' policies; there
are objective means of determining when a risk factor is significant and serious.
The implications of youir fanatical ethical reality--despite all its logical defects--on their face are numerous and disturbing.
"Logical defects" which you have failed to actually
identify. You simply state it as a fact that "I like it" is a reasonable counter to "it is objectively harmful", and ridicule any attempt to state otherwise. Do you not agree that the objective is more "real" than the subjective? Do you believe that the Heaven's Gate cult members were
not idiots for killing themselves in order to achieve a subjective gain? I have repeatedly demanded that you answer this question and you invariably decline to address it, preferring to puff your chest out about how superior you believe your logic is.
That you later introduced some arbitrary demarcation between choices that should only be decided on their universally accepted positive and negative value assignments means you're taking a step back, but then this whole exchange has been an exercise in posturing.
With that, I'm done. You think smoking is stupid amounts to a fact, you're entitled to your delusion.
You're done because after numerous challenges, you have completely failed to back up your claim that "I like it" is a reasonable counter to "it's objectively harmful". As for "posturing", I have three words for you: "pot", "kettle", and "black". You have consistently, conspicuously, and deliberately avoided addressing points that you could not handle. In the end, your entire argument for smoking is nothing more than "I like it". If you were out to prove that smokers can be intelligent, you have not done yourself any favours with your performance here.