I Have Questions wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 8:39 am
Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Tue Oct 17, 2023 4:35 pm
It's easy to claim something is self-contained when you refuse to look at the context.
The context doesn't change the explicit language and equivalence of his comment that I've quoted.
Some people have physical limitations: They may be born with a body that is not fully functional, or we may have an inclination to be attracted to those of the same sex.
He's equating same sex attraction as a physical limitation in the same way that having no legs or being blind or being deaf are physical limitations. What he should be equating it with is opposite sex attraction. But he doesn't. So you can apply all the perceived context you like. It doesn't change what he does in that very clear, very explicit, statement.
A person robs a bank. Does the context that he's just lost his job and is about to be evicted from his home with his wife and kids change the explicit fact that he robbed a bank?
Your analogy simply assumes away the reason for a dispute. You start with stating the conclusion "A man robs a bank." By doing so, you've removed yourself from your role as an interpreter. I'll illustrate using your example:
IHQ: A man robbed a bank.
RI: How do you know that.
IHQ: Watch this video clip.
Video clip from what appears to be from a security camera shows a person in a ski mask walking up to a bank teller and giving him a note. The teller nods at the man, takes money out of a drawer, puts it an envelope, and slides it to the person. The man walks away and leaves the field of the camera.
IHQ: He robbed the bank. It couldn't be clearer.
RI: Did you watch what came before and after on the video?
IHQ: I don't have to. It couldn't be clearer.
RI: You always have to check for context.
IHQ: Context is irrelevant. It's a self-contained even documented on camera. It couldn't be clearer.
RI: I'm going to check context before reaching a conclusion.
The start of a video shows a woman talking to two men, appearing to be giving them instructions. She walks out of the field of view. One man puts on a ski mask and walks out of view. The other walks out of view, then then back in behind a counter.
The part of the video described above then plays.
Finally, the woman, both men, and several other people enter the field of view. The woman talks to the assembled people, and there is what appears to be a question and answer session. The group laughs as the man who was wearing the ski mask shows that the envelope is full of newspaper clippings.
RI: When you look at the context, the man didn't rob the bank.
IHQ: He clearly did. The video shows it. It's a self contained event on the video.
RI: You can't tell whether or not an event is "self-contained" without considering the context.
We are talking about a long answer Bednar gave to a question. The evidence is a video tape. Because the answer is being translated, the entire answer is in the form [Phrase] [Pause for translation] [Phrase] [Pause for translation] [Phrase]. Bednar does not say "paragraph" or "period" or "comma" or "semi-colon." Just like the example above, you have arbitrarily picked a couple of phrases and claimed they are clear and self contained without ever considering what came before and after.