Justice and Rule
Legend
Oof, you're disappointing me.
Aww, I'm sorry.
Hypotheticals are absolutely, and fundamentally, important whenever you're trying to come up with explicable rules/guidelines/or morals. Hypotheticals help flesh out whether or not an axiom is working the way that it is intended to work.
Yes, but you can also make them to absolutely fulfill your argument while not actually reflecting real life. I can make up a hypothetical about someone being offended by anything, but that doesn't mean that it is actually germane to our conversation.
If you can't actually come up with real-life examples and defend them, then I just don't see why we don't use them. If you want to faff around with useless imaginary situations instead of actually addressing the real-life situation, then I really don't care. Go create a thread of weird hypotheticals. We have plenty of real situations to draw from here.
So if I have a principle "It is wrong to cause unnecessary suffering" we can pose hypothetical situations to test whether or not this maxim will generate counter-interpretive examples. Remember, if I say all geese are white, you only need to find one black goose to break that claim/show that it's false.
If you know what causes something to have property X, (in this case, X = need to be censored/removed), then you should be able to formulate some kind of rule to expresses that.
If you can't do that, then it doesn't seem like you actually have a complete understanding of property X is or what causes it. Your mode of "I know it when I see it" is useless because it doesn't allow us to predict ahead of time what might have property X.
No, because these situations are specifically contextually based, hence why hypotheticals are not useful. You can make hypotheticals that contextualize around anything and everything, but we have actual situations we are talking about right now that we can actually look at. Trying to figure out a magical set of rules that applies to everything misses that what we are talking about are almost always extremely situational and will rely on the specifics to dictate the intensity of the solution.
So yeah, I just don't care about whatever situation you want to make up. We don't need to figure an extensive flow-chart to dictate our response. We can come up with it individually because each situation will be individual.
There could be many.
They are applied indiscriminately, you cannot tell whether an individual product with a disclaimer has problematic material or not. Orcs of Thar has the same disclaimer as books of maps such as The Forgotten Realms Atlas.
They are applied to only non-current edition products.
They are unnecessary added verbiage.
They don't do much that is actually useful.
It can be taken as empty posturing.
It can be taken as an empty whitewashing effort.
Boilerplate and omnipresent means invisible and useless.
The arguments can vary on whether the argument is about whether WotC should put them up, whether WotC as a private corporate actor can choose to put them up, or whether the argument is should disclaimers be universal.
Those aren't arguments against a disclaimer, those are arguments about doing disclaimers badly. Those are not the same.