I’m not arguing for abolishing norms. You are arguing for dramatically increasing the rate of norm enforcement, and I’m arguing for keeping norm enforcement at the current level.
Above, I’ve provided several examples of ways that I think that increasing the rate of norm enforcement could have bad effects. Do you have some examples of ways that you think that increasing the rate of norm enforcement could have good effects?
Note that, for this purpose, we are only counting norm enforcements that are so severe that people would be willing to pay a blackmail fee to escape them. You can’t say “there’s a norm against littering, so increasing the rate of enforcing that norm would decrease littering” unless you have a plausible scenario in which people would get blackmailed for littering.
I’m not arguing for abolishing norms. You are arguing for dramatically increasing the rate of norm enforcement, and I’m arguing for keeping norm enforcement at the current level.
Above, I’ve provided several examples of ways that I think that increasing the rate of norm enforcement could have bad effects. Do you have some examples of ways that you think that increasing the rate of norm enforcement could have good effects?
Note that, for this purpose, we are only counting norm enforcements that are so severe that people would be willing to pay a blackmail fee to escape them. You can’t say “there’s a norm against littering, so increasing the rate of enforcing that norm would decrease littering” unless you have a plausible scenario in which people would get blackmailed for littering.