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Notes -
I think most people take a Person B position towards at least some things. If only for practical reasons. The problem, building on @KnotGodel's post below, is that this is too high a level of abstraction to be useful. Are Person B positions always correct? Plainly not. Are Person B positions never correct? Also no. All the interesting discussion is in the contexts in which we should be more like Person A or more like Person B.
Coming back around to the content warnings discussion I think there are plenty of interesting discussions to have here. Should university professors include content warnings on their syllabi? In their lectures? Should movies have these warnings before they start? Games? If we think in various situations these content warnings should exist then what do we do when people don't provide them? These are all interesting questions. Much more so than trying to reason in the abstract about whether we ever ought to alter our behavior to accommodate others.
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