Garthanos
Arcadian Knight
Awesome!Arguing on the internet has increased my critical thinking skills a lot because of it.![]()
Awesome!Arguing on the internet has increased my critical thinking skills a lot because of it.![]()
well... there is that. The best value may indeed be as you say in how you analyse the advertisement or political assertion or whatever you are being sold.you usually end up arguing about arguing.
Tony called it a pure DPS but I think someone else pointed out it could be used tactically where an enemy was down pretty low making it an interesting choice.I don't really have a dog in this substantive fight, but from a pure preference standpoint, I would prefer abilities that do more damage (or have other effects) on a successful "to hit" than abilities that do minor damage on a miss.
If you're talking about Uncanny Dodge, that doesn't work against fireballs or anything else that requires a saving throw.Oh my god the Rogue broke the game with a special ability that allowed him once in a while not take damage even though he is standing dead center in a fire ball
Inif you're talking about Uncanny Dodge, that doesn't work against fireballs or anything else that requires a saving throw.
Beginning at 7th level, you can nimbly dodge out of the way of certain area effects, such as a red dragon's fiery breath or an ice storm spell. When you are subjected to an effect that allows you to make a Dexterity saving throw to take only half damage, you instead take no damage if you succeed on the saving throw, and only half damage if you fail.
When the hit table showed a 0 or negative number to hit the fighter would auto hit and negative numbers optionally converted to bonus damage.
You know .... I tend to think the opposite.
Actual argumentation tends to take two forms:
1. Some sort of structured "debate" which should conform to a set of rules; or
2. A conversation between people with divergent viewpoints with an expected level of intellectual rigor and adherence to norms and a desire to ascertain both the other viewpoint and to learn what the better assertion is.
...the internet doesn't have that. More importantly, while learning about these sorts of fallacies can help in the day-to-day (for example, in understanding advertising!), they often hinder communication and conversation, because real conversation and persuasion relies on factors outside informal logic; moreover, by employing them, you usually end up arguing about arguing.
TLDR; the internet sucks.