A more charitable translation would be “I strongly disagree with you and have not yet been able to formulate a coherent explanation for my objection, so I’ll start off simply stating my disagreement.” Helping them state their argument would be a much more constructive response than confronting them for not giving an argument initially.
It is not as much that they haven’t given an argument or stated their position. It is that they are telling you (forcefully) WHAT to do without any justification. From what I can tell of the OP’s conversation this person has decided to stop discussing the matter and gone straight to telling the OP what to do. In my experience, when a conversation reaches that point, the other person needs to be made aware of what they are doing (politely if possible—assuming the discussion hasn’t reached a dead end, which is often the case). It is very human and tempting to rush to the ‘Are you crazy?!! You should __.’ and skip all the hard thinking.
It sounds like the generic “you” to me. So “you shouldn’t apply this stuff to society” means “people shouldn’t apply this stuff to society.” I don’t see anything objectionable about statements like that.
A more charitable translation would be “I strongly disagree with you and have not yet been able to formulate a coherent explanation for my objection, so I’ll start off simply stating my disagreement.” Helping them state their argument would be a much more constructive response than confronting them for not giving an argument initially.
It is not as much that they haven’t given an argument or stated their position. It is that they are telling you (forcefully) WHAT to do without any justification. From what I can tell of the OP’s conversation this person has decided to stop discussing the matter and gone straight to telling the OP what to do. In my experience, when a conversation reaches that point, the other person needs to be made aware of what they are doing (politely if possible—assuming the discussion hasn’t reached a dead end, which is often the case). It is very human and tempting to rush to the ‘Are you crazy?!! You should __.’ and skip all the hard thinking.
It sounds like the generic “you” to me. So “you shouldn’t apply this stuff to society” means “people shouldn’t apply this stuff to society.” I don’t see anything objectionable about statements like that.