You know that others will resupply if you buy this thing. If you didn’t knew until now that people resupply what you buy, now you know. Making you definitely are responsible from now on.
Imagine I throw candy at the floor an this kid always picks it up. Then I throw candy at the train tracks and the kid gets ran over. Am I not responsible for the kids actions?
I did not use the word “know” in the question “Do you think it’s unjustified to believe that they will resupply your demand?”. Notably, I asked if it is unjustified to believe so.
You claimed it’s impossible to know this in the philosophical sense, granted.
I clarified that my question was posed using “know” in the colloquial sense (i.e. to understand, to take cognition of). The question I originally asked is still unanswered.
You buy dead animal, they kill animal to put on shelf because you bought dead animal.
I’m not responsible for others actions
You’re cool with people buying lampshades and soapsmade from killed holocaust victims?
what difference at this point would it make?
This might be shocking for a g*rman to hear but giving money to people perpetrating a holocaust is bad
the holocaust is over.
The non-human animal holocaust is ongoing. Would you be buying lampshades from human skin during the holocaust?
it’s not a Holocaust. we don’t want to wipe out livestock.
You know that others will resupply if you buy this thing. If you didn’t knew until now that people resupply what you buy, now you know. Making you definitely are responsible from now on.
Imagine I throw candy at the floor an this kid always picks it up. Then I throw candy at the train tracks and the kid gets ran over. Am I not responsible for the kids actions?
knowledge, being a justified, true belief, precludes knowing the future. I cannot know what others will do.
I used “know” in the colloquial sense. Do you think it’s unjustified to believe that they will resupply your demand?
since the future hasn’t happened yet, no claim about it can, in the present moment, be true. so you can’t know it.
I did not use the word “know” in the question “Do you think it’s unjustified to believe that they will resupply your demand?”. Notably, I asked if it is unjustified to believe so.
if you will admit that it is impossible to know this, we can follow whatever tangent you like
You claimed it’s impossible to know this in the philosophical sense, granted.
I clarified that my question was posed using “know” in the colloquial sense (i.e. to understand, to take cognition of). The question I originally asked is still unanswered.