The no true Scotsman fallacy.isn't that a fallacy? someone says no x would ever y so the other comes back with an x doing y so then it's no true x...
used or missused I see it asserted to discount expertise.
The no true Scotsman fallacy.isn't that a fallacy? someone says no x would ever y so the other comes back with an x doing y so then it's no true x...
used or missused I see it asserted to discount expertise.
and i even accounted for that... things change, both policy and mindset and who is incharge. it is possible for something to be said today that will not show to be true in 2024 and still nobody lied.What else is there to add? I don't think they ever intentionally mislead anyone, there wouldn't have been a reason to do so.
excuse me what!?! in what way was it a hail mary?People seem to forget that 5E was a Hail Mary that was just supposed to keep the IP alive long enough for them to launch some movies.
thank youThe no true Scotsman fallacy.
No, appeal to authority is always an informal fallacy. The problem is that people scream this the moment an authority is mentioned while appeal to authority has a specific structure. It's an error in use, not an error in the stru ture of the fallacy.I didn't mean to imply there were exceptions in the way you took it. What I meant was that, as I stated in a prior post, is that not everything that sounds like a logical fallacy is one. Appealing to authority isn't always a fallacy, sometimes it's referencing expert opinion.
Which is a specific form of the broader special pleading fallacy. Simply "don't pay attention to the man behind the curtain."The no true Scotsman fallacy.
Isn't that sort of the antithesis of the OP's point, though?White box, red box, 5e's new starter box,
It's still D&D to me
Very much soWe should really be thanking Stranger Things, Critical Role, the Big Bang Theory, Marvel Studios and roughly the years 2005 to 2015 for the general slide toward making geek culture socially chic and the 80's and 90's for making D&D the single most iconic symbol of being a geek to the point that every celebration of geek culture has to mention it that contributed to the confluence of events that made D&D, not just 5e specifically popular.
We should really be thanking Stranger Things, Critical Role, the Big Bang Theory, Marvel Studios and roughly the years 2005 to 2015 for the general slide toward making geek culture socially chic and the 80's and 90's for making D&D the single most iconic symbol of being a geek to the point that every celebration of geek culture has to mention it that contributed to the confluence of events that made D&D, not just 5e specifically popular.