Lol, no thanks, I think we've analyzed enough jokes.
Never! Let's be honest, the jokes are the only thing that has kept this conversation interesting enough to have dragged on as long as it has. And I still want to see if there is such a thing as a joke you would deem inappropriate. If I do finally find something I say inappropriate, you can analyze that and show me why it's wrong. And we'll just assume everything else I write is appropriate if you've got no comment. And if there's nothing you would call inappropriate, despite me being a collector of the world's darkest jokes, then I'd say that "inappropriate jokes" simply don't exist. So how about making light of spousal abuse?
My wife was in an abusive relationship before we got together, but she hates to talk about it. In fact, for the first year that we were together, I just thought she really hated high-fives.
I know that domestic violence isn't something anyone is supposed to make light of, but can we all agree on how awesome domestic violence
could be, if everyone knew kung-fu?
It could be, but if people are capable of laughing at rape then they are capable of laughing at inappropriate rape jokes. Your idea that no one would laugh at an inappropriate joke is implausible.
That's inaccurate. I don't think that inappropriate rape jokes
exist. I think if you craft a joke well enough to be funny, then you won't find it inappropriate. Something doesn't qualify as "a joke" just because someone finds a statement funny.
I
said, "If, say, someone pulls a gun on a war vet they may well act instinctively. Their action in that moment is a conglomeration of rational acts, training, and habits from their past. The way that you respond to a situation is influenced by the way your past has instructed you to view that situation."
I know. But you're assuming that instructions lead to instincts because people with instructions
and real life experience
and real physical training act instinctively in accordance with those instructions. How do you know that if they
only had instructions they would still act "instinctively"? We know that people without instructions but with real life experiences act instinctively, so I'm leaning towards thinking that instructions are irrelevant to instincts.
Our thought patterns are formed by our experiences, including our mental experiences, and these form associations that affect our behavior. Movies are a good example. Someone who watches horror films to no end will react differently in a scary situation than someone who does not (or, perhaps more accurately, different situations will be viewed to be scary by the one person but not the other). This is all true despite the fact that watching a movie is largely a mental/imaginative activity.
With a movie you actually experience visual and audible stimuli. Those stimuli become associated with emotions, sure. Just like the orphan and the fluffy bunny. If someone were to film a rape scene, and add comical cartoonish sound effects and ridiculous goofy music, you might well associate a feeling of levity with the sight of someone being raped. Those stimuli don't exist in the telling of a joke though. The stimuli you experience are words on a page/screen, or someone standing in front of you talking.
You've already admitted my point: playing video games for 10 hours a day will affect behavior. You're just too stubborn to admit that it will affect behavior in a directional way.
I actually didn't, if you read what I wrote carefully. All I said was that there is a difference in behavior between someone who plays video games 10 hours a day and someone who plays outdoor sports 10 hours a day. I said nothing of effects. And I don't think it requires stubbornness to not "admit" something you've provided zero evidence for and that I've provided at least a little evidence against.
Perhaps we can start a new thread on the idea of fiction in a few weeks. I think it is a common misconception that consuming fictional material has no effect on one's life or behavior.
I think it's a common misconception that consuming fictional material affects behavior. A lot of people think like you do that violent video games increase violent behavior, despite all evidence to the contrary, for example. And if you think that, it would make sense that you think engaging in humor that involves dark topics would have a similar effect. Trouble is, there's no evidence to think either of those things is true, and there is evidence to think those things are false. Earlier in the thread you used superhero movies as an analogy as well. I think most people in America saw Infinity War and Endgame. With that many people engaging in fictional costumed vigilantism, then surely there must have been a rise in
real costumed vigilantism in America, right?
The harm that I have pointed to in this conversation is basically the harm of detrimental imaginative habits. If someone is only capable of misogynistic humor then they will eventually begin to manifest misogynistic tendencies.
What a weird if/then. If someone is
only capable of misogynistic humor, then I'd bet they're already manifesting misogynistic tendencies. Someone who can only engage in humor on a single topic is weird. I doubt such a person exists.
Humor isn't this magically neutral sphere of life that affects nothing else.
It can be. That's been my point all along. If I can do it, so can you, and so can pretty much everyone else. If there actually is a person out there who raped and wouldn't have if they hadn't heard a rape joke, then there's something that person is missing that folks like me have, or something that person has that folks like me lack. If there isn't a person out there that raped and wouldn't have if they hadn't ever heard a rape joke, then hearing rape jokes doesn't increase the likelihood that the hearer will rape. Why do you think such a person exists?
I was just trying to get you to examine your premises. If you think it's a new topic let's not open it.
That's not a premise of mine. I said it's all I can think of, and that I'm open to you showing me something else if there is anything. I never said that's all that there could possibly be.
Or people can enjoy evil acts, which is clearly what I was referring to.
No, it wasn't. You were referring to actors portraying an evil act, that's why I added my revised script. In your version, Bob knew they were actors, but thought that they were reenacting a real event; in my version Bob thought it was footage of a real event. Actors portraying an evil act that actually occurred in the past isn't the same thing as an evil act, but I feel like you've been trying to equivocate those things for some time now.