Debate ethics: Is there ever a valid time to use logical fallacies?

Arkan_Wolfshade

Philosopher
Joined
Jan 18, 2006
Messages
7,154
Suppose you are engaged in a debate with one, or more, people. It is a non-adjudicated debate and there may, or may not, be an audience of one, or more, third-parties. You have presented evidence supporting your side of the debate and you have shown their evidence to be in question as well as pointing out numerous logical fallacies they have committed. They refuse to acknowledge either that the fallacies are fallacies, or that things like logical fallacies exists or are relevent. You do not yet wish to step away from the discussion as a whole.

Is it appropriate to start using logical fallacies against their fallacies in an attempt to communicate in a manner consistent with their thinking?
 
Is it appropriate to start using logical fallacies against their fallacies in an attempt to communicate in a manner consistent with their thinking?

Unreservedly never. Even if there is no audience. It speaks to an intellectual integrity that, once compromised, will long after remain the worse for wear and in violation of the very principles a sceptic has by association chosen to uphold. If it is noticed by one's opponent or audience it is likely to become part of the opponents' armoury on top of diminishing one's credibility. I refer here to deliberate use of such subterfuge, but do not preclude the possibility that one may inadvertently commit such an error. The integrity can be preserved by acknowledging the error when it is pointed out, or, better yet, when one discovers it oneself upon further reflection.

'Luthon64
 
Is it appropriate to start using logical fallacies against their fallacies in an attempt to communicate in a manner consistent with their thinking?

Absolutely. The skepticwiki (http://www.skepticwiki.org) has an extensive section on logic and fallacies (much of it written by myself), and discusses this point extensively.

There are several reasons to use fallacies, of which the most important is that fallacious arguments are not necessarily wrong.. (To assert otherwise it to commit "the Fallacist's Fallacy" oneself.) All of science, in strict terms, is simply an extended instance of the "Hasty Generalization" fallacy, since we have no actual proof that, for instance, the sun will indeed rise tomorrow morning or that we won't read on tonight's news that all of the gold in the universe has suddenly turned back into gingerbread. "Affirming the consequent" is often a pretty good and convincing argument -- if you didn't commit the murder, then how did your fingerprints get on the gun, and how did your shoes track bloody footprints across the kitchen?

It can also be useful to use fallacies as instructive stalking horses -- suggest a particular fallacious argument, to be rejected, and then point out the similarity between the argument they have rejected and the argument they themselves offer.

The point of an argument is to convince. A fallacious argument can still be justifiably convining. How else were you going to persuade me that my wedding ring isn't going to turn into gingerbread?
 
They refuse to acknowledge either that the fallacies are fallacies, or that things like logical fallacies exists or are relevent. You do not yet wish to step away from the discussion as a whole.
Without more specifics, it's difficult to suggest an approach that could work.

Nevertheless, in many cases such as these I try to find analogies that show the absurdity of maintaining the fallacy. For example, when faced with the response, "That's just your opinion" to a factual assertion I have made, I usually reply:

* So is your assessment of the matter, but consider:
* It is my opinion that the sun will rise tomorrow;
* It is also my opinion that Arnold Schwarzenegger deserves an Oscar for his portrayals of a killing machine;
* My opinion about the sun deals with verifiable facts, while the one about Arnie deals with an unverifiable subjective appraisal and can only find validation through consensus;
* The matter we differ on is decided by facts, not consensus.

Another way of showing up such absurdity is to apply the fallacy to an extreme case or to take it to its logical extreme.

It's also worth noting that true believers often keep returning to the same line of argument. Pointing this habit out, together with the fact that you have already shown the argument to be weak or flawed sometimes works.

I hope this helps a little.

'Luthon64
 
Absolutely.
...snip...

You speak, of course, in terms of strict formal logic, rather than the honest practice of day-to-day debate, which is where Arkan_Wolfshade was heading, I suspect. On strict logical terms, no assertion about the world as it is experienced can be considered either true or false, merely probable or improbable. On those same strict terms, every such argument is fraught with fallacy. I think it would be intellectually dishonest and counterproductive to misrepresent data (other than possibly for instructive purposes, as you point out) in response to one's opponent doing so.

'Luthon64
 
Suppose you are engaged in a debate with one, or more, people. It is a non-adjudicated debate and there may, or may not, be an audience of one, or more, third-parties. You have presented evidence supporting your side of the debate and you have shown their evidence to be in question as well as pointing out numerous logical fallacies they have committed. They refuse to acknowledge either that the fallacies are fallacies, or that things like logical fallacies exists or are relevent. You do not yet wish to step away from the discussion as a whole.

Is it appropriate to start using logical fallacies against their fallacies in an attempt to communicate in a manner consistent with their thinking?

Yeah, I figure at this point, you have to rewind a bit and assess your purpose for being in such a situation. If there's no audience, and it seems like the opponents are unshakeable, then your attention may be best directed elsewhere.

In my opinion, the strategy should be to persuade reasonable people, and leave the doinks to themselves. Skepticism is an appeal to common-sense, and if your opponent doesn't have any, my advice is to move along to the low-hanging fruit that is represented by the sensible general public.
 
I am afraid I must disagree with you drkitten. Science is not a hasty generalization. We have every reason to belive the sun will rise tomorrow. It is consistent with our understanding of gravity, pyshics, and astronomy. There is no evidence of any kind to refute it. There's nothing hasty about science. Scientific conclusions are drawn for arduous labor, and exhaustively anlyized data, then vetted by peers, and rigorously examined by others. Even small changes to established theories take incredible amounts of work. That doesn't make those conclusions infallible, but it hardly makes them hasty.

It's my opinion that a logical fallacy is never appropriate, under any circumcumstances, in a debate. As soon as you resort to them, the discussion becomes an argument. Arguments aren't about who is right, or what the facts are, arguments about winning at any cost. Insults, backbitting, traps, rhetoric, appeals to authority, all of these are fair game in an arguement. Debates ought to be about the facts, and free of logical fallacies. If you can't make your point without resorting to a logical fallacy, maybe you don't actually have a point to make.
 
Thanks all for the responses. As I suspected there are many interesting points of quality for me to consider.


And, at the end of the day it boils down to, do I bother continuing my efforts on the LC forum, or just let them play in the their little psychotic sandbox and hope it doesn't spill over into the world at large.
 
Thanks all for the responses. As I suspected there are many interesting points of quality for me to consider.


And, at the end of the day it boils down to, do I bother continuing my efforts on the LC forum, or just let them play in the their little psychotic sandbox and hope it doesn't spill over into the world at large.


I'm sure there are lurkers and skeptics in the LC forum who appreciate it when to you stick to the facts, and avoid stooping to the level of the Loosers. When I was allowed to issue a short rebuttal to a ID proponent in a live speach, I stuck to my guns, avoided logical fallcies, and adhered strictly to the facts. When I had finished, one young man slipped a piece of paper into my hand thanking me for showing how a person can debate such a controvertial subject in a respectful manner. That's the kind of person I try to reach when I debate, not the people who are swayed by specious reasoning and logical fallacies. That little slip of paper was more rewarding than a standing ovation won with bad debate tactics. I don't find anything rewarding about playing with loaded dice.
 
Last edited:
I'm sure there are lurkers, and skeptics in the LC forum who appreciate it when to stick to the facts, and avoid stooping to the level of the Loosers.When I was allowed to issue a short rebuttal to a ID proponent in a live speach, I stuck to my guns, avoided logical fallcies, and adhered strictly to the facts. When I had finished, one young man slipped a piece of paper into my hand thanking me for showing how a person can debate such a controvertial subject in a respectful manner. That's the kind of person I try to reach when I debate, not the people who are swayed by specious reasoning and logical fallacies. That little slip of paper was more rewarding than a standing ovation won with bad debate tactics. I don't find anything rewarding about playing with loaded dice.

Still, it is tempting at times. Especially considering how much better you can load the dice if you understand how the loading works. :D
 
I am afraid I must disagree with you drkitten. Science is not a hasty generalization. We have every reason to belive the sun will rise tomorrow. It is consistent with our understanding of gravity, pyshics, and astronomy. There is no evidence of any kind to refute it. There's nothing hasty about science. Scientific conclusions are drawn for arduous labor, and exhaustively anlyized data, then vetted by peers, and rigorously examined by others. Even small changes to established theories take incredible amounts of work. That doesn't make those conclusions infallible, but it hardly makes them hasty.
Even so, science uses inductive logic, which is formally a fallacy (unless of course it is mathematical induction).
 
Even so, science uses inductive logic, which is formally a fallacy (unless of course it is mathematical induction).

Please demonstrate how science uses inductive logic. When a person devises a hypothesis, that hypothesis is vigorously tested, even attacked by experimentation and observation. One does not simply guess. Everything possible is done in an attempt to disprove all hypothesies.
 
But of course we should never use fallacious arguments because:

1. Once we make one fallacious argument we get onto a slippery slope that leads to all arguments being fallacious
2. Bertrand Russell said we should never use fallacious arguments
3. Adolph Hitler used fallacious arguments and it would make us like Adolph Hitler
4. Most people would not agree with using fallacious arguments
5. Are you saying that we should always use fallacies?
6. No true Scotsman would use a fallacy
7. Abraham Lincoln employed a logical fallacy and the next day he was shot, so logical fallacies are fatal
 
Please demonstrate how science uses inductive logic. When a person devises a hypothesis, that hypothesis is vigorously tested, even attacked by experimentation and observation. One does not simply guess. Everything possible is done in an attempt to disprove all hypothesies.

I think it's pretty well established that science is an inductive endeavour.



Deductive:

If A then B
A
therefore B

(corrollary: ~B, therefore ~A)



Inductive:

If A then probably B
A
therefore probably B

(corrollary: ~B, therefore probably ~A, therefore the utility of hypothetico/deduction aka Popper's conjecture/refutation epistemology rule)



Science uses induction. There's no guarantee that the sun will rise tomorrow, but the probability assigned is so high as to be one of the closest things to 'true' that you can think of. (because of one of science's underlying, unprovable, assumptions: uniformitarianism)
 
Please demonstrate how science uses inductive logic.
I thought it was pretty generally accepted, but OK, I will find you an article on it and get back to you.
When a person devises a hypothesis, that hypothesis is vigorously tested, even attacked by experimentation and observation. One does not simply guess.
Inductive logic does not mean "simply guessing". But inductive logic is still inductive logic no matter how rigorously it is tested.
Everything possible is done in an attempt to disprove all hypothesies.
Well let's look at an example. Rigorous and exhaustive study is done of the lesser swamp greeble and in every case the greeble nurtures their young for one year and then abandons them. No instance is ever found where the greeble abandons their young before one year or to nurture them after one year.

Let's say this is studied 24 hours a day for 20 years. Let's say 20 teams of competing scientists attempt to find an exception and can't. Scientists will very reasonably conclude that the lesser swamp greeble nurtures their young for one year and then abandons them.

But that is still inductive logic however rigorously researched. Because this particular 20 years might be atypical.
 
I'm sure there are lurkers and skeptics in the LC forum who appreciate it when to you stick to the facts, and avoid stooping to the level of the Loosers. When I was allowed to issue a short rebuttal to a ID proponent in a live speach, I stuck to my guns, avoided logical fallcies, and adhered strictly to the facts. When I had finished, one young man slipped a piece of paper into my hand thanking me for showing how a person can debate such a controvertial subject in a respectful manner. That's the kind of person I try to reach when I debate, not the people who are swayed by specious reasoning and logical fallacies. That little slip of paper was more rewarding than a standing ovation won with bad debate tactics. I don't find anything rewarding about playing with loaded dice.


I completely agree: skepticism is an appeal to common-sense and reasonableness.

People with no common-sense or interest in being reasonable cannot be won over to skepticism, but those are the people we end up debating because they're the ones who feel threatened. My advice is to pick battles to demonstrate skeptics' credibility to an audience, rather than actually expect to convert the opponent. Often, the opponent will hang himself, given the opportunity.
 
Please demonstrate how science uses inductive logic.
Would you agree that in science we are inferring universal laws from particular observations?

These observations may be rigorous and exhaustive but are still particular and this is inductive logic.

Bertrand Russell argued that inductive logic should be accepted as valid logic or science's conclusions would all be fallacious.

But no mathematical proof would be accepted if it used inductive logic (other, than mathematical induction).

Here is one of the most famous articles on the subject:

http://dieoff.org/page126.htm
 
Would you agree that in science we are inferring universal laws from particular observations?

These observations may be rigorous and exhaustive but are still particular and this is inductive logic.

Bertrand Russell argued that inductive logic should be accepted as valid logic or science's conclusions would all be fallacious.

But no mathematical proof would be accepted if it used inductive logic (other, than mathematical induction).

Here is one of the most famous articles on the subject:

http://dieoff.org/page126.htm

I take my earlier objection back. I was clearly wrong.
 
Real power is wielded by people who don't share this sentiment. By adhering to honest argumentation, you've already lost in the realm it most matters in.

Winners write the history books...and the laws. "This is why evil always wins. Because good...is dumb."
 

Back
Top Bottom