Is it too much to ask to demand an end to genocide?
After a day and several replies from people. I've come to the conclusion that people here are ok with their party and leaders supporting genocide and they attack the questioners (instead of their party leaders) who criticize those who support genocide.
Critical thinking is scarce here.
It's s good overview of the issue we're stuck on here. You're taking a strict 'Steadfast' position that since you've reasoned P, anyone reasoning not-P must be either of lower epistemic status, or have reasoned poorly. But as Christensen shows, most epistemologists recognise that this position is flawed (p.2).
Anyway, have a read, if you feel so inclined. See if any of it makes sense to you, or maybe opens up some epistemological issues you perhaps hadn't considered.
My beliefs are based on existing evidence and rational analysis.
when I am confronted with new information, I add that into my belief system and my belief system changes accordingly.
your belief system is "nuh uh, I never heard that before so how real can it be?"
your linked paper is a more conplicated description of exactly what I have been describing your problem as.
you are trying to pretend that words simply mean other words.
you are selfish.
you can agree or disagree, it doesn't change the selfishness of taking away others rights to advance your own sense of self-worth.
The democratic party advances social policy that benefits society at large and affords more rights to everyone.
your toddler terror tantrum threat is that you'll take away the rights of others if they won't make you feel good.
that is selfish by definition.
it doesn't matter if you agree or disagree with anybody else, taking away the rights of others unless they applaud your flawed thought experiments is selfish.
freedom to disagree is not the issue.
comfortably ensconced in the illogical feedback loop of your own belief system, you are acting selfishly.
when I am confronted with new information, I add that into my belief system and my belief system changes accordingly
You've misunderstood the paper
It's not about information. The argument is about disagreement among epistemic peers. We all have the same information. You've not provided any information I didn't already know. I've not provided any information you didn't already know. We've been exchanging theories, not information.
The paper is about the status of disagreement in conclusions based on the same information.
As I said in my other comment, if you really can't tell the difference between a theory and the facts on which it is based, then we can't possibly have a rational discussion since rational discussion is premised entirely on that distinction.
We don't discuss facts, we demonstrate them by the presentation of evidence. We discuss theories drawn from those facts.
Well, if you consider your conclusions to be facts, not theories then what are you doing here? This is a forum for discussing the item in the OP. You can't discuss facts, they're merely presented. I fear you have this place confused with a schoolroom. If you want to present facts, write a textbook.