OK, we all agree ishi’s writing style is a headscratcher, but the subcomments are quickly degenerating into bullying. This is a human being we don’t even know, and look at us happily speculating on hir thinking skills and sanity.
Actually, it now appears to me that the insults started at the first comment, when hir humanity was put into question and we accepted it was a valid discussion topic. Getting involved in seemingly interesting puzzles without pausing to consider how our words may hurt people “has been the fate of many a Ravenclaw.”
Therefore, I’m retracting my previous participation in this discussion.
subcomments are quickly degenerating into bullying
I respectfully submit that you use this term in a noncentral way:
Cyberbullying is the use of information technology to harm or harass other people in a deliberate, repeated, and hostile manner.
Specifically, there was no harassment. Whether ishi has suffered harm as a result of this thread is unclear at best, and certainly no harm was intended by any of the commenters, even assuming ishi is human.
Please consider tempering your allegations next time you feel indignant.
Oh, wow, that’s where this uniform protest against making guesses about mental states comes from? It’s actually written into their ethical guidelines?
I don’t understand this. Is there some obvious or non-obvious reason for psychiatrists not to guess at mental states out loud, beyond the obvious one where people might listen to your opinions?
If the doctor hasn’t personally examined the person in question, any attempt at diagnosis is guesswork and has a great risk of damaging that person’s reputation.
If the doctor has personally done the examination, he/she is bound by professional confidentiality.
If the one attempting to diagnose is not a doctor in the first place, he/she has no business speculating on other people’s mental health, and there’s still risk of damaged reputation.
It is bad for the reputation of psychiatry — and thus, people’s willingness to go to psychiatrists when they would benefit from doing so — if psychiatrists use allegations of mental illness as a social or political stigma.
If you believed you might have a sexually transmitted disease, would you go to a doctor of a school that was known for speculating on how poxy or syphilitic various public figures were, as a way of saying those figures were bad and untrustworthy people?
OK, we all agree ishi’s writing style is a headscratcher, but the subcomments are quickly degenerating into bullying. This is a human being we don’t even know, and look at us happily speculating on hir thinking skills and sanity.
Actually, it now appears to me that the insults started at the first comment, when hir humanity was put into question and we accepted it was a valid discussion topic. Getting involved in seemingly interesting puzzles without pausing to consider how our words may hurt people “has been the fate of many a Ravenclaw.”
Therefore, I’m retracting my previous participation in this discussion.
I respectfully submit that you use this term in a noncentral way:
Specifically, there was no harassment. Whether ishi has suffered harm as a result of this thread is unclear at best, and certainly no harm was intended by any of the commenters, even assuming ishi is human.
Please consider tempering your allegations next time you feel indignant.
I’ll just link to this and I’m done.
Oh, wow, that’s where this uniform protest against making guesses about mental states comes from? It’s actually written into their ethical guidelines?
I don’t understand this. Is there some obvious or non-obvious reason for psychiatrists not to guess at mental states out loud, beyond the obvious one where people might listen to your opinions?
I don’t get it.
If the doctor hasn’t personally examined the person in question, any attempt at diagnosis is guesswork and has a great risk of damaging that person’s reputation.
If the doctor has personally done the examination, he/she is bound by professional confidentiality.
If the one attempting to diagnose is not a doctor in the first place, he/she has no business speculating on other people’s mental health, and there’s still risk of damaged reputation.
It is bad for the reputation of psychiatry — and thus, people’s willingness to go to psychiatrists when they would benefit from doing so — if psychiatrists use allegations of mental illness as a social or political stigma.
If you believed you might have a sexually transmitted disease, would you go to a doctor of a school that was known for speculating on how poxy or syphilitic various public figures were, as a way of saying those figures were bad and untrustworthy people?