Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 8:51 pm
Fairy's dramatic performance presupposed agreement. In other words, it clearly took for granted that all right-thinking people would be drawn to sympathize. So Fairy was leaning on the assumption that her appeals would invoke a sense of moral compulsion. But why should she think so, since she also claims that there can be no moral duties, no moral rightness, no moral obligations, no moral consensus, not even a set of stable moral criteria of judgment...just total subjectivism?
Wrong assumption, Sorry.

I wasn't appealing or petitioning for any favourable outcomes in the moment. Do you know what being in the MOMENT actually means IC ?
You assumed Fairy was expecting right-thinking people would be drawn to sympathise that night. Nope, sorry that's just silly.
Firstly, Fairy did not take for granted any positive response may or may not come. If responses were to come, then Fairy had no idea, or awareness at the time what any response would be. I was simply expressing myself in the
'actual' moment, not even considering what any future responses in response were going to be.
If Fairy, on that night, already had prior-knowledge of what responses were going to be spoken; say like had they been awful, unkind, insensitive, non-sympathetic, or just ugly negative responses....what would it have mattered? it wouldn't have changed anything that flowed unimpeded out of my mouth that night. All I was doing in the moment was releasing my emotional pain on a forum that I know Harbal likes to read. That's all I cared about in the moment. I did not care about if or any responses came. Why was I doing it on the forum was because Harbal who loves to read this forum hurt me so I wanted to hurt him back, that's all that was happening in my head that night. H and F met on this forum, we formed an intimate relationship through this forum. If not for this forum I would never have met H
This forum was Harbal's other beloved, he told me this forum is where he loves to spend his time, and that it gave him a lot of meaning and purpose to his everyday real-time life.
I was an outpouring of painful emotion in the immediate moment, I wasn't even thinking about what responses I would get. So how could I have been taking for granted right-thinking responses? You could just as easily have juxtaposed by saying the opposite that I was expecting wrong-thinking people would be drawn to not sympathise with me.
I didn't even know what was going to come out of my mouth that night, it was all just flowing unimpeded as it was actually happening, I wasn't aware of what I was expected to say at any time prior to saying it, it all just came out like an arrow. And there was no way I could have acted any different than how it all happened just as it did. If I could have acted any different, then I would have, I could have chosen not to do it at all, so acting any different would have been impossible.
Yes, I intentionally used this forum to hurt Harbal, but not to expect responses, I simply didn't care about responses.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 8:51 pm
Fairy whined like a vineyard. And clearly, she expected us all to "tsk tsk" Harbal about it, and to "there there" her about it. (Why else would she think it was a "weapon" as she says.)
That's clearly WRONG to say that, because I didn't expect sympathy. You assumed I did when I didn't. For the exact same reasons I've given above.
I did say I was using my outburst as weapon against Harbal.. after I'd already received responses, not before the responses were given...I never once in the actual moment of the outburst said I was using it as a weapon on that actual night. So again, you are wrong to assume I was expecting sympathy when I clearly wasn't. But the fact that you clearly falsely believed otherwise, was a false assumption on your part, and not the real actuality of the situation on that night.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 8:51 pmBut subjectively speaking, why should we feel we "ought" to agree with her? Unless we all already know that what H. did was "bad," there's nothing to agree with. So Fairy was assuming we'd all know the common standard, and that we'd all feel we ought to adhere to it. She was behaving like an objectivist could, but no subjectivist reasonably can.
But no one reading was ever obliged to agree with anything, because nothing was expected of any reader to respond in any favourable way, that's why.
How on earth could I have been behaving like an objectivist or a subjectivist for that matter, when I wasn't even thinking at the actual time, or even expecting any for or against possible preferential responses, if any?