Logical fallacies as a form of deception

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There is a notion I heard one of you express once that many "logical fallacies" aren't really fallacies, or at best are misused to the point that the concept is of little use. It's something I've got to thinking of.

In general I think that what a lot of your Fucking Love Science types get wrong is that they're just so autistic and uptight that they won't recognize the value of heuristics, because that would require them to admit the limitations of human knowledge. Something that flies in the face of their whole worldview.

I'm going to address two common ones here through the lens of economics.


SLIPPERY SLOPE
This is the big one. A logical fallacy where someone argues that allowing X (reasonable thing) will lead to Y (unreasonable thing) without drawing any explicit line of logic as to why X will cause Y. It is also the weakest fallacy today as just about everything Angry Church Men said in the past has come true. The very basis for the Overton Window is an assumption that there is a window of normalcy that moves with the policy people are used to.

In it's strictest form, it's a fallacy when things really are unrelated, but that's almost never the case when people invoke it. What really got me thinking about this is Timur Kuran's Private Truths, Public Lies. In it, he wrote a political economy model of "preference falsification" (people tactically self-censoring to avoid public pressure) and used his model to analyze real-world events like the switch from Jim Crow to affirmative action (Kuran hates AA), the fall of the Eastern Bloc and other events. Kuran had a few major points:
1) Before revolutions, change often seems impossible, the regime seems extremely stable and genuinely widely supported
2) Revolutions snowball extremely fast, often starting from absolute nonsense (like a vendor being beaten by cops)
3) After revolutions, change seems inevitable, people bleat about how it was a miracle the regime survived as long as it did and how everyone hated it

What Kuran demonstrated was that you can have a stable social equilibrium where everyone professes to support some awful thing because active participation in punishing dissidents is the only valid survival strategy. Everyone hates it, everyone can even know everyone else hates it, but if it is too costly to not police your fellow man cowards will still support the status quo. But every now and then along comes some big dick fearless Chad who refuses to play along, and in doing so makes a few other people flip, at the margin, to resistance, and it starts a snowball effect that can, in the aftermath, actually switch to a different equilibrium of lying.

Well, you could imagine a case where the private desire is bad, enforcing punishment is costly (instead of not enforcing it being costly), play around with it to get something where it's talking about people wanting to take dick in the ass or sacrifice babies to Moloch instead of wanting to have equal political rights. You relax the standards, more people are emboldened to reveal their degeneracy, it becomes more costly to stand against them and for less benefit, everyone wants their own particular degeneracy embraced, reform is a self-perpetuating machine that ends in the destruction of civil society.

I think the slippery slope is, at this point, more of a law of society than a fucking "fallacy."


AD HOMINEM
"X says Y. X is a bad person, so Y must be bad."

This one is a stronger fallacy, it is definitely true. But where this goes astray is that it denies the role that "rational ignorance" plays in people's decisionmaking.

Information is costly to acquire and the benefits of acting upon it are finite. You may not know the exact costs or benefits, but you do have some set of reasonable expectations about what the world normally looks like. All human behavior depends in some fashion on this concept. Nobody searches forever for the cheapest version of something on Amazon. Nobody searches forever for the best job. People go until they find something good enough.

A person's own understanding of reality works in no less the same way. Nobody digs down to the Ultimate Truth. Most of your scientists out there don't know how to recreate every experiment that their body of theory is based on; they take for granted, on some kind of evidence, that it is probably true for some sufficiently high level of "probably." Non-scientists don't have as high a standard and normalfaggots don't have one at all besides social convention.

Where personal character comes into this is if personal character correlates with correctness. In natural sciences I don't think it does at all. But in social sciences, is that really that unlikely? Is it that unlikely that a person who is a shithead will view society with warped eyes and draw warped conclusions? Is it that unlikely that someone who is a narcissist will find that ideas that revolve around subjugating everyone to some sort of human-designed law won't find that those ideas speak to their soul? That a sick pervert won't want to promote a culture that shames them less and gives them more access to their perversions?

And while this does get outside of strict scientific logic, I think it is common sense that good people yield better fruits, socially if not for themselves, than bad people.

An ad hominem attack might be illogical, when there is actual proof before you. But much of the time, when it's being used in some social sciences, philosophical, theological, political or artistic context, it is one of the very best heuristics a person has when the world is too complex to run like a science experiment.

The reason I think about this one a lot is that I have noticed in my time that most shitty ideas came from shitty people, and vice versa. For me this came from learning what an asshole Karl Marx was in his personal life compared to what a saint Adam Smith was (dude was described as being very happy and kind).
 
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"X that says Y is a bad person, so Y must be bad."
That is not an ad hominem fallacy. Ad hominem fallacies occur when you attack the person to discredit the argument.

As an example: Josh says Toyotas are the best cars; rather than argue, you call him a retard who beats his wife, and reject his claim on that basis (i.e., because Josh is a wife-beating retard, Toyotas aren't the best cars).

Think media attacks on politicians: Senator X is a terrible person, therefore you can safely ignore his arguments about Y.

Your example is Appeal to Authority: rather than defend your argument, you say that an authority figure supports it (e.g., Wikipedia says Kiwi Farms is bad, therefore Kiwi Farms is bad.)

Sounds like a straw man, therefore you are wrong.
*chuckles smugly*
"I have made a meme wherein I've depicted you as a soyjack and myself as a gigachad. Therefore, your argument is invalid."
 
"I have made a meme wherein I've depicted you as a soyjack and myself as a gigachad. Therefore, your argument is invalid."
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Too many fallacies to remember so I will say that I am correct and you are wrong to not hurt brain
 
That is not an ad hominem fallacy. Ad hominem fallacies occur when you attack the person to discredit the argument.

As an example: Josh says Toyotas are the best cars; rather than argue, you call him a retard who beats his wife, and reject his claim on that basis (i.e., because Josh is a wife-beating retard, Toyotas aren't the best cars).

Think media attacks on politicians: Senator X is a terrible person, therefore you can safely ignore his arguments about Y.

Your example is Appeal to Authority: rather than defend your argument, you say that an authority figure supports it (e.g., Wikipedia says Kiwi Farms is bad, therefore Kiwi Farms is bad.")


"I have made a meme wherein I've depicted you as a soyjack and myself as a gigachad. Therefore, your argument is invalid."
What I was talking about was a mixture of both, and I'd argue that they're very closely related (different strains of the same thing) because they both come down to prioritizing who is saying something rather than what they are saying.

The example of how people draw conclusions from a body of collected wisdom is Appeal to Authority.

What i talked about with bad people probably having bad ideas is absolutely an Ad Hominem. Like: Freud is a crazy pervert who probably wants to fuck his own mom, so I'm going to take his opinions on the health of the human mind with a grain of salt.
 
Fallacies are guidelines to identify people who don't argue in good faith or are not affected by logical arguments. They aren't always correct and made to be vague since times change.
Like arguing that a child molestor shouldn't be listened on how to raise children isn't an Ad Hominem because it's clear he is likely to give bad advice for his own gain.
 
Reread his example. "X" is the person saying "Y." Because X is a bad person, Y is bad.
His example is functionally identical to the examples of ad-hom you gave.
He said "X that says Y is a bad person, so Y must be bad." I don't think its either, its just retarded. e.g Null: "troon is a bad person, so troon must be bad".

Ad hominem is more like:
Y: [Claim B].
X: [Y] is a [Claim C], therefore [Claim B] is wrong.

Charlie: Trooning your kids is righteous.
Null: Charlie is a faggot, therefore trooning your kids is not righteous.

Appeal to authority:
Y: [X] says [C], therefore [C}

Tesla tards: Elon says FSD will be ready next year, therefore FSD will be ready next year.

Problem is, reddit tards assume that a problem with the logic means the claim must be false. Where as, in reality all it means is that specific argument can be disregarded, but the claim may still be true, it just requires a better argument for it to be accepted (See ad hominem example).

Its used to attempt to keep formal debate clean and not piss away time/train people not to get caught out. Its a good way to spot retards in normal conversation though. Any claim they make, ask for proof, then if they say something dumb like 'science' (and not point to reasonable studies/research), just tell them that its wrong because its an appeal to authority. Rinse and repeat.
 
He said "X that says Y is a bad person, so Y must be bad." I don't think its either, its just retarded. e.g Null: "troon is a bad person, so troon must be bad".

Ad hominem is more like:
Y: [Claim B].
X: [Y] is a [Claim C], therefore [Claim B] is wrong.

Charlie: Trooning your kids is righteous.
Null: Charlie is a faggot, therefore trooning your kids is not righteous.

Appeal to authority:
Y: [X] says [C], therefore [C}

Tesla tards: Elon says FSD will be ready next year, therefore FSD will be ready next year.

Problem is, reddit tards assume that a problem with the logic means the claim must be false. Where as, in reality all it means is that specific argument can be disregarded, but the claim may still be true (See ad hominem example).

Its used to attempt to keep formal debate clean and not piss away time/train people not to get caught out. Its a good way to spot retards in normal conversation though. Any claim they make, ask for proof, then if they say something dumb like 'science' (and not point to reasonable studies/research), just tell them that its wrong because its an appeal to authority. Rinse and repeat.
"X that says Y"
The statement is equivalent to "tranny that says 'we should fuck kids' is a tranny, so fucking kids is bad."
 
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"X that says Y"
The statement is equivalent to "tranny that says 'we should fuck kids' is a tranny, so fucking kids is bad."
"X that says Y is a bad person, so Y must be bad."
tranny that says we should fuck kids is a bad person, so fucking kids is bad.
I would argue that its more non-sequiteur than ad hominem (though it feels ad-hominemy) because you're not shitting on the tranny making the claim directly, but rather saying that 'all trannies that make said claim X is a faggot*, therefore claim Y is false'

* "all trannies that make said claim is a faggot" is a claim and not an indirect ad-hominem if you're not debating a tranny.

Edited: Apologies to the nigger beneath me.
 
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As an example: Josh says Toyotas are the best cars; rather than argue, you call him a retard who beats his wife, and reject his claim on that basis (i.e., because Josh is a wife-beating retard, Toyotas aren't the best cars).
This sounds smart at first but then you remember that Josh is a spokesperson for Toyota and so cannot be trusted to give an unbiased opinion on the matter. You know he's a spokesperson for Toyota because he beats his wife.
 
Problem is, reddit tards assume that a problem with the logic means the claim must be false. Where as, in reality all it means is that specific argument can be disregarded, but the claim may still be true, it just requires a better argument for it to be accepted (See ad hominem example).
This is actually the ad logicam fallacy, or the fallacy fallacy.

Susan: americans speak english. I speak english, therefore I am american.
Redditor: false, people from other countries also speak english, you have made a fallacy, therefore you are not american.

(Despite her mistake in logic, turns out Susan is actually american and Redditard is not aware of their own mistake.)
 
This sounds smart at first but then you remember that Josh is a spokesperson for Toyota and so cannot be trusted to give an unbiased opinion on the matter. You know he's a spokesperson for Toyota because he beats his wife.
Ah, but what he isn't and I'm lying because I want everyone to drive a Ford Model T?
 
This is actually the ad logicam fallacy, or the fallacy fallacy.

Susan: americans speak english. I speak english, therefore I am american.
Redditor: false, people from other countries also speak english, you have made a fallacy, therefore you are not american.

(Despite her mistake in logic, turns out Susan is actually american and Redditard is not aware of their own mistake.)
That sounds like a retard trying to do a proof by contradiction without understanding the concept.
 
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