- Joined
- Apr 26, 2019
Don't argue about anything important anywhere on the Internet if your goal is changing the other person's view. That will never happen because nobody enters these debates with any plan to concede the point no matter how hard they lose. Psychology doesn't work that way.
Instead, your target is the audience. People change their minds based not on debates they have had themselves, but on those they see between third parties. This is because they have much less ego invested in one particular outcome.
So adopt tactics that play well to neutrals. Be pleasant and courteous and keep your cool. Let your opponent damage themselves if they flip out but do not gloat or obviously goad them.
And most importantly of all, your rhetoric should come from your opponent's premises if possible. Presenting arguments that, for example, capitalism is the best hope for raising people out of poverty or that feminism harms equality will deprive your opponent of much of their rhetorical weaponry. Arguing from your opponent's premises is devastating because it means they can't try to demonise or smear you, or attack your values. It's also much more likely to win over neutrals, which is the real point of online debate.
Make sure to get them to nail themselves down to a concrete premise, first. Make sure the audience notices when they stray off-premise.