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I agree there is a risk of getting issues muddled, and in this exchange I'm not trying to take a position on the sex work issue itself. I explained why I think Murphy is being evasive with her answers (she's acutely aware of the vulnerabilities in her positions) and cited to the particular pattern in her evasiveness as evidence for that thesis. I've dissected her interviews and even emailed her for clarification and that's what I have to work with. Even with that incomplete record, I also tried to construct what I think is an "honest" approach to what she seems to be getting at. If you think I might have gotten the basic tenets of her argument wrong, can you be specific about what my error is?
If I was analyzing your behavior the same way you're analyzing Murphy's, I'd likely come to the conclusion that this was deliberate.
I don't think you demonstrated her avoidance so much as you invented it. Your email exchange is a good example. If memory serves, you asked her how she ended up coming to her beliefs about prostitution, and, like a normal person, she recalled the events that made an impression on her - conversations she had with proustites. You then framed it as her admitting to following a data-driven approach, in supposed contradiction to her earlier statement that no data could change her mind, even though there is no contradiction between these statements.
This is another point against cross-examination being awesome: even when someone is being clear about what they believe, you can ask unrelated question, and frame the answer to imply they believe something they don't.
Sure:
The first error was implying that the "sex is sacred" view somehow contradicts her views on casual sex.
The second error was to use the first one to paint your version of the "basic tenets" as a more reasonable argument.
The third error was ascribe the supposedly more reasonable views to her, despite no evidence that she holds them.
The fourth error was declaring that the likely reason she did not express the views, which there is no evidence she even holds, was that expressing them would force her to adjust her position.
You are welcome to do so and I would be eager to hear your evidence. I would be curious to know how you'd address one of the first hurdles, namely that I do agree with Murphy that selling sex is qualitatively different than virtually every other job. If I'm discussing cross-examination deliberately as just a pretext, why would I be doing so to undermine my own position?
I don't know what else to say here, she literally refused to answer Destiny's question and walked off, and she ignored multiple questions I asked her (e.g. most prominent one was how she ascertains the quality of a study, to her credit though she answered most of them). That's my definition of "avoidance", I'm not sure if you have a different one.
'Sacred' and 'casual' are not direct antonyms, but it seems fair to say that they point to completely different directions. I readily admit that I don't know if this necessarily is a contradiction for Murphy, because I don't know how she'd reconcile the positions.
I don't follow. Is the problem that I used what you think is an erroneous premise, or that I declared my alternative argument to be more reasonable? If the former, my alternative argument doesn't rely on the "sex is sacred" premise so you can just take it out. If the latter, it would be helpful to explain why it's not reasonable rather than just assert it so.
This is very confusing. There's overwhelming evidence that she holds the premises that selling sex is coercive because money is involved, and that sex makes women vulnerable, she said exactly so in the video we're discussing. I have no idea how you would overlook that. If what you meant to say is that she doesn't hold the exact argument I just made, well yes, that's why I said it was my own reformulation attempt instead of attributing it to her. Please let me know if I should've have been even more specific.
Again, if you think something is an error, it helps to address the specific arguments I made for why I reached that conclusion rather than just assert it's wrong. "Is too" "Is not" is not a productive exchange.
I'd have to go through your posts, but I feel like establishing a pattern where you mix a bunch of topics during the course of an argument would be easy enough. The challenge would be to get evidence that you do it on purpose, in order to muddle the issues. Thankfully your approach does not require much in terms of evidence, all I'd have to do is write a plausible story, where your actions are interpreted in an uncharitable light.
Because you wouldn't be undermining your own position. It's pretty clear that the reason you disagree with Murphy is that she thinks all pornography and all prostitution is bad, and you think it can be bad, but in some cases can be ok.
Usually when you accuse someone of being evasive or avoidant, it means they are deliberately trying to not answer a specific question. Her hanging up on Destiny is not evidence of her avoiding a question. There are many other reasons that could explain her refusing to continue the conversation, including the ones she directly stated prior to leaving the stream, or Destiny's conduct during the debate outlined by jkf.
"Sacred" in this context just means "regarding it higher than other day-to-day activities", it can mean anything from "only between married couples" to "only if you feel an emotional connection to the person" (or what the kids these days call "demisexual"). "Casual sex" usually means "outside of a romantic relationship, and with no expectation of it leading to one" it too can mean anything from "sucking off random dudes in bathroom stalls" to "I met someone at a conference, they're from the other side of the world, so there was no chance of it going anywhere, but we were vibing so great together that I spent the night with them anyway". Between the corners of these extremes there's plenty of space for someone being ok with casual sex, but believing it's sacred enough to not be for sale.
It does rely on it. If the "sex is sacred" argument is kept on the table, you can't go on to declare that the likely reason she did not express the argument you outlined, is because it would force her to modify her position. There's still the possibility that that she's just going with the "sex is sacred" approach instead.
And these are all very different from what you wrote in your outline, so I'm not overlooking them, you're moving the goalposts.
"Women are vulnerable (during sex)" does not mean there's an element of violence and coercion in sex. "Selling sex is coercive, because there's money involved" does not imply the same logic holds for wage work.
If you didn't attribute it to her, it makes even less sense to claim that she didn't express these views, because it would force her to modify her position.
Yeah, but that's the problem with making claims with no evidence - it makes "is not" a perfectly valid response that needs to be addressed.
I understand that you're not convinced by my argument that there's enough evidence that Murphy is acting dishonestly, though keep in mind that I didn't claim my argument was conclusive or irrefutable. That's why I included an epistemological warning up top.
What you're doing here (noting how this specific behavior of hers can have an innocent explanation) is great pushback! I offer one explanation and you offer another, but unless you develop why your explanation is more likely, we're kind of left in the agnostic "who can know?" position. If that's your position then cool.
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