I stated "has to leave the bar", not "must leave the bar"
You see, this is what I don't get."
There's apparently a difference between "must" and "has to" big enough to matter, but other folks are "anal-retentive" if they note major flaws of logic?
I stated "has to leave the bar", not "must leave the bar"
EDIT: Never mind, but yes, I feel that the current focus of our debate or argument is an anal-retentive one.There's apparently a difference between "must" and "has to" big enough to matter, but other folks are "anal-retentive" if they note major flaws of logic?
Posts like this are why I'd actually support "Fallacy!"-free Friday. To wit: the vast majority of people who cry "fallacy" don't know what they're talking about. An ad hominem says, essentially, "your argument is wrong because you're the one who made it. Something about you invalidates the argument." Merely attacking someone or painting them in a negative light is not an ad hominem.If you say "you are being illogical," without explaining what you mean, you are yourself committing a logical fallacy; specifically an ad hominem.
You can dare, but again, you'd be wrong. Any basic guide to argumentation will advise you to be judicious in your use of the word "fallacy." Assuming, that is, that you're genuinely interested in meaningful discussion. Because when "fallacy" pops up in an argument, particularly on teh intarwebz, it's usually invoked as an "I win" button, and there's nothing fruitful about that.That's not what I said. Dare I say that that's a straw man. By "meaningful discussion," I meant a place where any idea could be discussed in a fruitful way, which is the opposite of how you seem to define it.
Merely attacking someone or painting them in a negative light is not an ad hominem.
Because when "fallacy" pops up in an argument, particularly on teh intarwebz, it's usually invoked as an "I win" button, and there's nothing fruitful about that.
... particularly on teh intarwebz, it's usually invoked as an "I win" button, and there's nothing fruitful about that.
That could be true for "You are illogical" (depending on context) but not "You are being illogical." The progressive aspect of the latter locates its meaning solely in the present.Correct. "You are being illogical" though, still generally ad hominem, though a weak one - the idea is to suggest that since the person has characteristic X (in this case, an illogical state of mind) then their position can be dismissed.
Perhaps, slightly. In my experience, the people with a little education are the worst offenders. They know enough to lob the big words, but not enough to do so responsibly. Of course there are many excellent posters here, but I'd be willing to bet that if you combed through their histories, you'd find few accusations of fallacious reasoning.Around here, my personal experience has been that it is used slightly more constructively than that. Perhaps not much more constructively in some cases, but most of the time it seems a bit better than you suggest here.
Could be. It never hurts to reiterate the principle of charity, though.This thread strikes me as and attempt to get an 'I win'
That could be true for "You are illogical" (depending on context) but not "You are being illogical." The progressive aspect of the latter locates its meaning solely in the present.
I'm not ripping the post apart, just noting that there's a really important nuance there. If A says "You aren't being logical" in response to B's argument, then what A is really saying is "Your argument isn't logical." That's just idiomatic English (with a dash of synecdoche), not an ad hominem, and it's the kind of thing someone would actually say. But sure, like I said the first time around, "You are illogical" would in most cases be an ad hominem. However, going back to the original claim:A major way logic is misapplied to message board discussions is by using your own meaning of a phrase, rather than the author's. Most folk just aren't that exacting in their word choice, so it pays to give folks a bit of leeway most of the time. If the *author* didn't really note the difference between "you are illogical" and "you are being illogical", ripping the point apart based on that isn't constructive to the discussion.
We can still say that:If you say "you are being illogical," without explaining what you mean, you are yourself committing a logical fallacy; specifically an ad hominem.
I don't disagree. The same goes for calling "fallacy!"And, needless to say, for a goodly bunch of folks on the internet, the fiddly bits of word choice are pointed out when it benefits their side of the argument, but not noticed when it would not help their side.
Which I think supports my contention on post 30 that, like the Yankees bar, that the status quo has been self-selected to determine what is "meaningful discussion".
Next time I have a discussion with my wife, I have to remember to tell her that she's making a "bad argument" and we're not having a "meaningful discussion"<--- smiley face connotes humorous parameters to exclude fallacy declaration that marriage is not analogous to Enworld
I think that some/many Enworld threads begin as discussions (although some OPs instantly initiate a debate). I think you get into debates when anyone perceives and subjectively feels challenged by two or more conflicting opinions existing simultaneously.The problem is that you are trying to connect discussion with argument. It's very, very hard to have a discussion on the Internet because it's such a slow medium. So, we tend to post our thoughts, as (mostly) discrete, complete ideas, and then bang them together with other people's (mostly) discrete, complete ideas.
That's not how discussion works generally. But, again, because of the medium, discussion is virtually impossible. So, we (very loosely) debate. And because of the debate structure, some of the strategies of debate creep into things. And the idea of a "fallacy" is one strategy in debate.
Like it or hate it, you can't really "discuss" on the Internet.