Glancing at the argument...
by
FieldingBandolier
09/06/2008, 9:41 PM #
the author seems to be conflating discrediting statements and statements of disagreement. Discrediting statements are intended to preempt any conceptual engagement with someone who disagrees, and yes, they're inherently disrespectful. When you say someone has no credibility, then you have an excuse to disregard anything they say.
Disagreement, on the other hand, is an invitation for dialogue. Rather than suggest disrespect, I'd say it implies the opposite.
"How exactly do you disagree with someone's moral views without
degrading them? Can you really say pedophelia is disgusting without
degrading pedophiles?"
No, you can't. But if you're saying pedophilia is disgusting, your also can't really say the intent of your statement was to disagree with pedophilia - use of the term "disgusting" means you've made a judgment about the credibility of anyone who might disagree that preempts any possibility of a dialogue in which two sides are expressing disagreement.
That's a very different statement than, "The consequences of pedophilia are too grave to consider it viable." At least with that statement, you've invited debate on the topic of the consequences of pedophilia, which is the rational basis by which it is rightly discredited.