TrueLife - How Not to Argue: Mastering Conflict, Communication & Influence
Episode Date: September 6, 2020One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US🚨🚨Curious about the future of psych...edelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/BbJHXMyzaPB2I1CQeGmpLogical fallacies exposed!Transcript:https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/51487308Speaker 0 (0s): Ladies and gentlemen for the thousands in attendance and the millions watching around the world, <inaudible> Speaker 1 (12s): Classic for you guys. Welcome to the podcast. So happy you're here. So there's these two members of a synagogue and they're having this terrible argument. And one of them says, do you stand for the repetition of the Amita? Or do you sit there arguing, screaming, just going at each other? No, you have to stand. No, you have to sit. Finally, they go and see the last surviving founder of the show. They say, mr. Burnbaum you have to solve this for us. Do you sit or do you stand? And they say, well, do you sit? And he looks at him and scratches his head. And he says, no, that's not the tradition. So we stand then. No, no, that's not the tradition. And I say, listen, mr. Bernbach, we are ready to start killing each other. And he says, yeah, yeah, that's the tradition. Speaker 0 (58s): <inaudible> Speaker 1 (1m 2s): Argumentation. My friends. Do you like to argue? You like to have critical conversations. How about a civil discourse? What about a debate? Everyone loves a debate. I love a good debate. You know how to have a good debate. You have to utilize good language. It's also important to realize in any argument, especially in argument with someone you love the purpose of an argument. Do you know what that is? I'll tell you the purpose of an argument to solve a problem. You know what I do? I forget that sometimes you ever do that, like right in the heat of an argument, instead of worrying about the issue, you decide that you must, when you decide you must have the last word, that song by Billy Joel, you had to be a big shot. Didn't you, you had to have the last word last night. You ever fall into that trap. You ever get goaded into that trap or someone slings and ad hominem attack at you and you fire back with one. And then all of a sudden, you're no longer even talking about the issue. You're just trying to hurt the other person that happens way too much and it doesn't solve anything. It makes things worse. I learned that way too late in life. So this series a podcast is going to be about argumentation, logical, fallacies, and how to create a better discourse in your home environment and work environment. And with people you love one key point. I want everyone to realize is that the way you speak to other people is usually the way you speak to yourself. Do you know what I mean by that, that voice in your head, that internal dialogue, all long we're thinking and what is thinking? Well, it's asking yourself questions. You may not talk to yourself and ask those questions out loud, but inside your mind's eye, inside your mind, your cognitive apparatus, you are asking, answering questions. You are navigating your way through life by asking those questions. And a lot of times our inner dialogue shapes our view of the world. That's why I say so often that the world is made of language. The language we use describes who we are and it describes the world. We see it's important to also remember, we can't go anywhere without a linguistic pathway. So logical fallacies are not only something that we use in our argumentation or our discussion with other people. They are the terms in which we define ourselves. One of the most important components of learning is academic discourse. It requires argumentation and debate, argumentation, and debate inevitably lend themselves to flawed reasoning and rhetorical errors. Many of these errors are considered logical. Fallacies, logical fallacies are common place in the classroom, in the workplace and in the home in formal televised debates and perhaps most rampantly on any number of internet forms, but what is a logical fallacy and just as important, how can you avoid making logical fallacies yourself regardless of where you are in life or what you're preparing for, whether you're on campus or in the workplace, it pays to know your logical fallacies. Let's lay out some of the most common fallacies you might encounter and that you should be aware of in your own discourse and debate. What exactly is a logical fallacy? A logical fallacy is an error in reasoning. Common enough to warrant a fancy name, knowing how to spot and identify fallacies is a priceless skill. It can save you time, money and personal dignity. There are two major categories of logical fallacies, which in turn break down into a wide range of types of fallacies each with their own unique ways of trying to trick you into agreement. Number one is a formal fallacy is a breakdown in how you say something. The ideas are somehow sequenced incorrectly. Their form is wrong. Rendering the argument as noise and nonsense and informal fallacy denotes an error in what you are saying. That is the content of your argument. The ideas might be arranged correctly, but something you said isn't quite right, the content is wrong or off kilter for this particular podcast, we will be working doctor dr. Wise, call your office with informal fallacies. I am going to give you 10 different types of logical fallacies. You are most likely to encounter in discussion and debate ad homonym, straw, man argument appeal to ignorance, false dilemma, slippery slope, fallacy, circular argument, hasty generalization, red herring fallacy to CoQuora casual fallacy, fallacy of sunk costs, appeal to authority, equivocation appeal to pity bandwagon fallacy. Let's start at the top with an ad hominem attack. Speaker 2 (7m 23s): Are you familiar with this, Speaker 1 (7m 24s): For those of you that are, I hope that you'll find this particular set. We go through as a refresher for those of you that are not pay attention so that you can not only understand Speaker 2 (7m 38s): What does is okay, Speaker 1 (7m 41s): But you can also understand when you use it. And even more importantly, you'll be able to point it out to the person whom tries to use it upon you. Ad hominem fallacy. When people think of arguments, often their first thought is have shouting matches riddled with personal attacks. Ironically, personal attacks run contrary to rational arguments in logic and rhetoric. A personal attack is called an ad hominem ad hominem is Latin for against the man instead of advancing good sound reasoning and ad Hom and replaces logical argumentation with attack language unrelated to the truth of the matter more specifically, the ad hominin is a fallacy of relevance where someone rejects or criticizes another person's view on the basis of personal characteristics, background, physical appearance, or other features irrelevant to the argument at issue. An ad hominem is more than just an insult. It's an insult used as if it were an argument of evidence in support of a conclusion, verbally attacking people proves nothin...
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Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, Sun ripped away, her health bereft.
I roar at the void.
This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate.
The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel.
Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights.
The scars my key, hermetic and stark.
To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark, fumbling, fear.
Hearers through ruins maze lights my war cry born from the blaze.
The poem is Angels with Rifles.
The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Seraphini.
Check out the entire song at the end of the cast.
Ladies and gentlemen, for the thousands in attendance, and the millions watching around the world.
I got a classic for you guys.
Welcome to the podcast.
so happy you're here. So there's these two members of a synagogue and they're having this terrible
argument. One of them says, do you stand for the repetition of the Amita or do you sit?
They're arguing and screaming and just going at each other. No, you have to stand. No, you have to
sit. Finally, they go and see the last surviving founder of the shoal. They say, Mr. Burnbaum,
you have to solve this for us. Do you sit or do you stand? And they say, well, do you sit? And he
looks at him and scratches his head.
And he says, no, that's not the tradition.
So we stand then.
No, no, that's not the tradition.
And they say, listen, Mr. Burnbar, we are ready
to start killing each other.
And he says, yeah, yeah, that's the tradition.
Argumentation, my friends.
Do you like to argue?
You like to have critical conversations?
How about a civil discourse?
What about a debate?
Everyone loves a debate.
I love a good debate.
You know how to have a good debate?
You have to utilize good
language. It's also important to realize in any argument, especially an argument with someone
your love, the purpose of an argument. Do you know what that is? I'll tell you. The purpose of an
argument is to solve a problem. You know what I do? I forget that sometimes. You ever do that?
Like right in the heat of an argument, instead of worrying about the issue, you decide that you must win.
you decide you must have the last word.
Remember that song by Billy Joel?
You had to be a big shot, didn't you?
You had to have the last word last night.
You ever fall into that trap?
You ever get goaded into that trap
or someone slings an ad hominem attack at you
and you fire back with one?
And then all of a sudden you're no longer even talking about the issue.
You're just trying to hurt the other person.
That happens way too much.
and it doesn't solve anything.
It makes things worse.
I learned that way too late in life.
So this series of podcast is going to be about argumentation,
logical fallacies,
and how to create a better discourse
in your home environment and work environment
and with people you love.
One key point I want everyone to realize
is that the way you speak to other people
is usually the way you speak to yourself.
Do you know what I mean by that?
That voice in your head, that internal dialogue, all day long we're thinking.
And what is thinking?
Well, it's asking yourself questions.
You may not talk to yourself and ask those questions out loud, but inside your mind's eye,
inside your mind, your cognitive apparatus, you are asking a question.
answering questions.
You are navigating your way through life by asking those questions.
And a lot of times our inner dialogue shapes our view of the world.
That's why I say so often that the world is made of language.
The language we use describes who we are and it describes the world we see.
It's important to also remember we can't go anywhere without a linguistic pathway.
So logical fallacies are not only something that we use in our argumentation or our discussion with other people, they are the terms in which we define ourselves.
One of the most important components of learning is academic discourse.
It requires argumentation and debate.
Argumentation and debate inevitably lend themselves to flawed reasoning and rhetorical errors.
Many of these errors are considered logical fallacies.
Logical fallacies are commonplace in the classroom, in the workplace, and in the home.
In formal televised debates, and perhaps most rampantly on any number of Internet forms.
But what is a logical fallacy?
And just as important, how can you avoid making logical fallacies yourself?
Regardless of where you are in life.
or what you're preparing for, whether you're on campus or in the workplace. It pays to know your
logical fallacies. Let's lay out some of the most common fallacies you might encounter and that you
should be aware of in your own discourse and debate. What exactly is a logical fallacy? A logical fallacy
is an error in reasoning common enough to warrant a fancy name, knowing how to spot
and identify fallacies is a priceless skill.
It can save you time, money, and personal dignity.
There are two major categories of logical fallacies,
which in turn break down into a wide range of types of fallacies,
each with their own unique ways of trying to trick you into agreement.
Number one is a formal fallacy.
Is it a breakdown in how to,
you say something. The ideas are somehow sequenced incorrectly. Their form is wrong, rendering the
argument as noise and nonsense. An informal fallacy denotes an error in what you are saying
that is the content of your argument. The ideas might be arranged correctly, but something
you said isn't quite right. The content is wrong or off-kilter.
For this particular podcast, we will be working...
Paging Dr. White.
Dr. White, call your office.
With informal fallacies.
I am going to give you 10 different types of logical fallacies.
You are most likely to encounter in discussion and debate.
Ad homonym, straw man argument, appeal to ignorance, false dilemma,
Slippery Slipar Slope Fallacy
Circular Argument
Hasty
Generalization
Red Herring Fallacy
Tukotua
Casual Falsy
Fallacy of Sunk
Costs
Appeal to authority
Equivocation
Appeal to Pity
Bandwagon
Fallacy
Let's start at the top with an ad hominem attack.
Are you familiar with this?
For those of you that are, I hope that you'll find this particular set we go through as a refresher.
For those of you that are not, pay attention so that you can not only understand what this is,
but you can also understand when you use it.
And even more importantly, you'll be able to point.
it out to the person whom tries to use it upon you.
Ad hominem fallacy.
When people think of arguments, often their first thought is of shouting matches, riddled with personal attacks.
Ironically, personal attacks run contrary to rational arguments.
In logic and rhetoric, a personal attack is called an ad hominem.
Ad hominem is Latin for against the man.
Instead of advancing good sound reasoning, an ad hominem replaces logical argumentation with attack language,
unrelated to the truth of the matter.
More specifically, the ad hominem is a fallacy of relevance where someone rejects or criticizes another person's view on the basis of personal characteristics.
Background, physical appearance, or other features irrelevant.
to the argument at issue.
An ad hominem is more than just an insult.
It's an insult used as if it were an argument of evidence in support of a conclusion.
Verbly attacking people proves nothing about the truth or falsity of their claims.
Use of an ad hominem is commonly known in politics as mud-slinging.
Instead of addressing the candidate's stance on the issues or addressing his or
her effectiveness as a statesman or stateswoman. An ad hominem focuses on personality issues,
speech patterns, wardrobe style, and other things that affect popularity but have no bearing on
their competence. In this way, an ad hominem can be unethical, seeking to manipulate voters
by appealing to irrelevant foibles and name-calling,
instead of addressing court issues.
In this last election cycle,
personal attacks were volleyed freely from all sides of the political aisle,
with both Clinton and Trump facing their fair share of ad hominem fallacies.
So to be clear, an ad hominem is an insult used as if it were an argument
or evidence in support of conclusion.
I'm going to give you a couple examples
from the last election between Trump and Hillary.
Some of the Trumpisms used against Hillary
were Hillary Clinton, crooked Hillary,
Hill of the Hun, Shillery, Hitleri,
Hildebeast, defender of child rapists,
corporate whore, Mr. President, Hail Hillary, Wicked Witch of the West Wing,
Robertie, Hillham, Clinton, Mrs. Carpet Bagger, and the decidedly subtle, the devil.
There were an equally amount of ad hominem tax against Trump,
short-fingered vulgarian
angry cream sickle
fascist carnival barker
fuck face von clownstick
decomposing jacko lantern
chairman of the saddam hussein
fan club
racist clementine
chito jesus
tangerine tornado
the use of ad hominem
often signals the point at which a civil disagreement has descended into a fight, whether it's
siblings, friends, or lovers. Most everyone has had a verbal disagreement crumble into a disjointed
shouting match of angry insults and accusations aimed at discrediting the other person. When these
insults crowd out a substantial argument, they become ad hominemes.
trending number one on Twitter, Jordan Peterson, international bestseller, Jordan Peterson, right?
This is what I'm saying to you. Why the rage, bruh? You're doing well, but you're a mean, mad white man.
The straw man argument. It's much easier to defeat your opponent's argument when it's made of straw.
Kind of reminds me of the three little pigs.
Remember that?
It was a house made out of bricks,
one made out of sticks,
and one made out of straw.
Easily, the wolf could blow down the house made of straw.
The strawman argument is aptly named
after a harmless, lifeless scarecrow.
In the straw man argument,
someone attacks a position
the opponent doesn't really hold.
Instead of contending with the actual argument, he or she attacks the equivalent of a lifeless bundle of straw,
an easily defeated effigy which the opponent never intended upon defending anyway.
The strawman argument is a cheap and easy way to make one's position look stronger than it is.
Using this fallacy, opposing views are characterized as non-starter.
lifeless, truthless, and wholly unreliable.
By comparison, one's own position will look better for it.
You can imagine how strong in arguments and ad hominem fallacies can occur together,
demonizing opponents and discrediting their views.
This fallacy can be unethical if it's done on purpose,
deliberately mischaracterizing the opponent's position for the sake of deceit.
receiving others. But often the straw man argument is accidental because the offender doesn't realize
they are oversimplifying a nuanced position or misrepresenting a narrow, cautious claim
as if it were broad and foolheartedly. If there is no God, why do you spend your whole life
trying to convince people that there isn't? Why don't you just stay home? It's not my, it isn't my whole
career. It's become a major preoccupation of my life, though, especially since September 11, 2001,
to try and help generate an opposition to theocracy. Next up, appeal to ignorance. Anytime ignorance is
used as a major premise in support of an argument, it's liable to be a fallacious appeal to ignorance.
Naturally, we are all ignorant of many things, but it is cheap and manipulative to allow this unfortunate aspect of the human condition to do most of our heavy lifting in an argument.
Interestingly, appeal to ignorance is often used to bolster multiple contradictory conclusions at once.
Consider the following two claims.
No one has ever been able to prove definitively.
that extraterrestrials exist, so they must not be real.
No one has ever been able to prove definitively that extraterrestrials do not exist,
so they must be real.
If the same argument strategy can support mutually exclusive claims,
then it's not a good argument.
An appeal to ignorance isn't proof of anything except that you don't know something.
If no one has proven the non-existence of ghosts or flying saucers, that's hardly proved that those things either exist or don't.
If we do not know whether they exist, then we do not know that they do exist or that they don't exist.
Appeal to ignorance doesn't prove any claim to knowledge.
We won with poorly educated. I love the poorly educated.
Next up, false dilemma, false dichotomy.
This fallacy has a few other names, black and white fallacy,
either or fallacy, false dichotomy, and bifurcation fallacy.
This line of reasoning fails by limiting the options to two,
when there are, in fact, more options to choose from.
Sometimes the choices are between one thing,
the other thing, or both things together.
They don't exclude each other.
Sometimes there is a whole range of options, three, four, or five, or a hundred and forty-five.
However it may happen, the false dichotomy fallacy errs by oversimplifying the range of options.
Dilemma-based arguments are only fallacious when, in fact, there are more than the stated options.
It's not a fallacy, however, if there really are only two options.
For example, either Led Zepp.
Zeppelin is the greatest band of all times, or they're not.
That's a true dilemma, since there really are only two options there, A or non-A.
It would be fallacious, however, to say there are only two kinds of people in the world, people who love Led Zeppelin and people who hate music.
Some people are different about that music.
Some sort of like it, or sort of dislike it.
but don't have a strong feeling either way.
The false dilemma of fallacy is often a manipulative tool designed to polarize the audience,
heroizing one side and demonizing the other.
It's common in political discourse as a way of strong arming the public
into supporting controversial legislation or policies.
Our demands are simple, a small cost of living increase,
and some better equipment and supplies for your children.
Give it to them.
Yeah, in a dream world, we have a very tight budget to do what she's asking.
We'd have to raise taxes.
Race.
Right.
Next up is the slippery slope.
You may have used this fallacy on your parents as a teenager.
But you have to let me go to the party.
If I don't go to the party, I'll be a loser.
are with all my friends.
Next thing you know,
I'll end up alone and jobless,
living in your basement when I'm 30.
The slippery slope fallacy works
by moving from a seemingly benign premise
or starting point
and working through a number of small steps
to an improbable extreme.
This fallacy is not just a long series of causes.
Some causal chains are perfectly reasonable.
There could be a complicated series of causes,
that are all related, and we have good reason for expecting the first cause to generate the last
outcome. The slippery slope fallacy, however, suggests that unlikely or ridiculous outcomes are
likely when there is just not enough evidence to think so. It's hard enough to prove one thing
is happening or has happened. It's even harder to prove a whole series of events will happen.
That's a claim about the future. And we have to prove that. We have to be a problem.
haven't arrived there yet. We generally don't know the future with that kind of certainty.
The slippery slope fallacy slides right over the difficulty by assuming that chain of future events
without really proving their likelihood. A good example of this might be if America doesn't
send weapons to the Syrian rebels, they won't be able to defend themselves against their
warring dictator.
lose their civil war and that dictator will oppress them and the Soviets will consequently carve
out a sphere of influence that spreads across the entire Middle East. Pretty ridiculous, right?
Next up, circular argument. When a person's argument is just repeating what they already assumed
beforehand, it's not arriving at any new conclusion. We call this a circular argument or circular
reasoning. If someone says the Bible is true, it says so in the Bible. That's a circular argument.
They are assuming that the Bible only speaks truth. And so they trust it to truthfully report that it speaks
the truth because it says that it does. It is a claim using its own conclusion as its premise
and vice versa. In the form of if A is true because B is true, because B is.
is true. B is true because A is true. Another example of circular reasoning is, according to my brain,
my brain is reliable. Well, yes, of course, we would think our brains are in fact reliable if our brains
are the ones telling us that our brains are reliable. Circular arguments are also called
Petito Principi, meaning assuming the initial thing, commonly mistranslated as begging the question.
This fallacy is a kind of presumptuous argument where it only appears to be an argument.
It really just is restating one's assumptions in a way that looks like an argument.
You can recognize a circular argument when the conclusion also appears as one of the premises in your argument.
The politics of failure have failed. We need to make them work again.
I am looking forward to an orderly election tomorrow, which will eliminate the need for a violent bloodbath.
Next up, hasty generalization.
This is a general statement without sufficient evidence to support it.
A hasty generalization is made out of a rush to have a conclusion, leading the arguer to commit some sort of illicit assescent.
assumption, stereotyping, unwarranted conclusion, overstatement, or exaggeration.
Normally, we generalize without any problem.
It is a necessary regular part of language.
We make general statements all the time.
I like going to the park.
Democrats disagree with Republicans.
It's faster to drive to work than to walk, or everyone mourn the loss of Harambe, the gorilla.
Indeed, the above phrase all the time is a generalization.
We aren't literally making these statements all the time.
We take breaks to do other things like eat, sleep, and inhale.
These general statements aren't addressing every case every time.
They are speaking generally, and generally speaking, they are true.
Sometimes you don't enjoy going to the park.
Sometimes Democrats and Republicans agree.
Sometimes driving to work can be slower than walking if the roads are all shut down for the
Harambe procession.
Hasty generalization may be the most common logical fallacy
because there's no single agreed upon measure
for sufficient evidence.
Is one example enough to prove the claim that
Apple computers are the most expensive computer brand?
What about 12 examples?
What about if 37 out of 50 Apple computers
were more expensive than comparable models from other
brands. There's no set rule for what constitutes enough evidence. In this case, it might be possible
to find reasonable comparison and prove that claim is true or false. But in other cases,
there's no clear way to support the claim without resorting to guesswork. The means of measuring
evidence can change according to the kind of claim you are making, whether it's in philosophy
or in the sciences, or in political debate,
or in discussing house rules for using the kitchen.
A much safer claim is that Apple computers are more expensive
than many other brands of computers.
Meanwhile, we do well to avoid treating general statements
like they are anything more than simple, standard generalizations.
Instead of true across the board,
even if it is true that many Apple computers are more expensive
than other computers.
There are plenty of cases in which Apple computers are more affordable than other computers.
This is implied in the above generalization, but glossed over in the first hasty generalization.
A simple way to avoid hasty generalizations is to add qualifiers like sometimes, maybe, often,
or it seems to be the case that when we don't guard against hasty generalizations, we risk
stereotyping, sexism, racism, or simple incorrectness. But with the right qualifiers, we can often make a
hasty generalization into a responsible and credible claim. This place is great. How many cute guys here?
Do you smell bacon? Bacon? It's a bacon club chalupa. Guys love bacon. That's really going to work.
Come on. Hi. Hey. How's it going to?
What is that you're wearing? It's intoxicating.
Bacon lovers rejoice.
Number eight, the red herring fallacy.
A red herring fallacy is a distraction from the argument, typically with some sentiment that seems to be relevant but isn't really on topic.
This tactic is common when someone doesn't like the current topic and wants to detour into something else and
Instead, something easier or safer to address.
A red herring fallacy is typically related to the issue in question, but isn't quite relevant
enough to be helpful.
Instead of clarifying and focusing, it confuses and distracts.
The phrase red herring refers to a kippert herring, salted herring fish, which was reddish-brown
in color and quite pungent.
According to legend, this aroma was so strong and delectable to dogs that it served as a
training device for testing how well a hunting dog could track a scent without
getting distracted. Dogs aren't generally used for hunting fish, so a red herring is a
distraction from what he is supposed to be hunting. A red herring fallacy can be
difficult to identify because it's not always clear how different topics relate.
A side topic may be used in a relevant way or in an irrelevant way. In the big
meaty disagreements of our day, there are usually a lot of
lot of layers.
With different subtopics weaving into them, we can guard against the red herring fallacy
by clarifying how our part of the conversation is relevant to the core topic.
Let's listen in on this old debate right here.
Also, it's important to remember how many of these logical fallacies are used by politicians?
If you watch the debate style of any politician, you are getting.
guaranteed to see multiple examples of different kinds of fallacies if you're paying attention.
It's really fun to watch.
11 o'clock that same day, two Mondays ago, John McCain said that we have an economic crisis.
That doesn't make John McCain a bad guy, but it does point out he's out of touch.
Those folks on the sidelines knew that two months ago.
Governor Palin, may respond.
John McCain, in referring to the fundamental of our economy being strong, he was.
was talking to and he was talking about the American workforce and the American workforce is the
greatest in this world with the ingenuity and the work ethic that is just entrenched in our workforce.
That's a positive, that's encouragement, and that's what John McCain meant.
Next on deck, the two quokua fallacy.
The two quokua Latin for U2 is also called the appeal to hypocrisy because it distracts from the argument
by pointing out hypocrisy in the opponent.
This tactic doesn't solve the problem or prove one's point
because even hypocrites can tell the truth.
Focusing on the other person's hypocrisy is a diversionary tactic.
In this way, using the two-quot typically deflects criticism away from yourself
by accusing the other person of the same problem or something comparable.
If Jack says, maybe I committed a little adultery, but so did you, Jason.
Jack is trying to diminish his responsibility or defend his actions by distributing blame to another person.
But no one else's guilt excuses his own guilt, no matter who else is guilty.
Jack is still an adulterer.
The two quokua fallacy is an attempt to divert blame, but it really only distracts from the
initial problem. To be clear, however, it isn't a fallacy to simply point out hypocrisy where it occurs.
For example, Jack may say, yes, I committed adultery. Jill committed adultery. Lots of us did, but I'm still
responsible for my mistakes. In this example, Jack isn't defending himself or excusing his behavior.
He's admitting his part within a larger problem. The hypocrisy claim becomes a too quok of fallacy
only when the arguer uses some apparent hypocrisy to neutralize criticism and distract from the issue.
Let's take another listen from one of our favorite politicians.
The Pope did go on to say this is not the gospel as far as what you have said about whether I would advise to vote or not to vote.
I'm not going to get involved on that.
I say only that this man is not Christian.
If he has said things like that, we must see if he said things in that way and I will give him the benefit of the doubt.
And he also talked about having a wall.
not Christian and he's got an awfully big wall at the Vatican I will tell you so next up number
10 the causal fallacy the causal fallacy is any logical breakdown when identifying a cause
you can think of the causal fallacy as a parent category for several different fallacies about
unproven causes one causal fallacy is the false cause or non-causes
pro-caza, not the cause for a cause fallacy, which is when you conclude about a cause without enough
evidence to do so. Consider, for example, since your parents named you harvest, they must be farmers.
It's possible that the parents are farmers, but the name alone is not enough evidence to draw that
conclusion. That name doesn't tell us much of anything about the parents. This claim commits the false
fallacy. Another causal fallacy is the post hoc fallacy. Post hoc is short for post hoc, ergo,
proctor hawk. After this, therefore, because of this. This fallacy happens when you mistake something
for the cause just because it came first. The key words here are post and proctor, meaning after,
or because of. Just because of. Just because of.
this came before that does not mean this caused that post does not prove proctor a lot of superstitions are
susceptible to this fallacy for example yesterday i walked under a ladder with an open umbrella
indoors while spilling salt in front of a black cat and i forgot to knock on wood with my lucky dice
that must be why I'm having such a bad day today.
It's bad luck.
Now it's theoretically possible that those things cause bad luck,
but since those superstitions have no known or demonstrated causal power
and luck isn't exactly the most scientifically reliable category,
it's more reasonable to assume that those events by themselves did not cause bad luck.
Perhaps that person's bad luck is just their own.
interpretation because they were expecting to have bad luck.
They might be having a genuinely bad day, but we cannot assume some non-natural relation
between those events.
Cause today to go bad.
That's a post hoc fallacy.
Now, if you fell off a ladder onto an angry black cat and got tangled in an umbrella,
that will guarantee you have a bad day.
Another kind of causal fallacy is the correlational fallacy.
also known as
come hawk ergo proctor hawk
that's latin
with this therefore because of this
this fallacy happens when you
mistakenly interpret two things
found together as being casually
related two things may
correlate without a casual relation
or they may have
some third factor causing both
of them to occur
or perhaps
both things just coincidentally
happen together. Correlation doesn't prove causation. Consider, for example, every time Joe goes swimming,
he is wearing his speedos. Something about wearing speedos makes him want to go swimming. That statement is a
correlation fallacy. Sure, it's possible that he spontaneously sports his tidy, witty swim trunks
with no thoughts of where that might lead. And surprisingly, he's now motivated to dive and swim in cold,
wet nature. It's possible. But it makes more sense that he puts on his swimsuit because he's
planning to go to the beach. Listen to this classic Christopher Hitchin destroying Rabbi Kushner.
I can't find the compulsory mutilation of the geratiles of children are subject for humor in that way,
more flippancy in that way. Maimonides says very plainly that it's designed to repress
sexual pleasure to deprive a male child as possible of the opportunity of that.
Christopher, I've got to call you down on referring to circumcision as genital mutilation.
My son cried more at his first haircut than he did at his bris.
Statistically, the only long-term effect that it seems to have on people is it increases
their chances of winning a Nobel Prize.
Shame on you for saying what you just said.
Shame on you for saying it about your own son, my God.
What if whatever Muslim was to say to you just now,
my little girl cried more at her first haircut than when I cut off her clitoris?
What would you think of me if I was to say?
Such a disgusting thing.
There you have it, my friends.
There are ten different logical fallacies for you to check out.
Hopefully you can incorporate those into your daily use and you can also identify all 10 of those when they are being used against you.
Remember, the purpose of an argument is to solve a problem.
I hope you choose to use these tools to solve the problems in your life and help the lives of the people around you.
It's all I got for today. I love you guys.
Be taken out here with a few more seconds of this lovely song, drums of war.
Until tomorrow, my good friends, remember, I love you. Aloha.
