I am most pissed off when I see people using false dichotomies and slippery slope mentalities. So much rage. So little thought.
Only the guilty would want to hit their accusors in the face with a wooden tableYossarian1507 said:None of the mention irritate me as logical Catch-22 (Hah, you thought I picked that username JUST because I loved the book? Well... You're right, it's purely a coincidence but nevermind)
What am I taking about? Situations like that (which sadly happens to me from time to time):
Something bad/awkward happened, and thanks to some gossip and mislead point of view, you are the painted as a horrible, horrible man who did something unforgivable (or at least critique worthy), even if it's completely false or only 5% correct.
You try to explain yourself... And you can usually hear 'only guilty explains himself'. You're doomed. If you won't try to explain yourself... 'Then you are admitting your guilt'. You're doomed as well.
Seriously, whenever I hear something like that I want to hit that person saying it in the face with a wooden table.
You've convinced me to go with false dichotomy as the worst, because of it's consequences.PasDeChat said:False Dichotomy, a brilliant idea. It spawned dualistic thinking, black or white, heaven or hell live or die. there are no alternative, no real choices, no clever solutions.
I truly despise the inability to accept or even consider an alternative solution to any issue.
Yea but didn't he host the Olympics? So should he have said people who host it are like Hitler?Hubilub said:Godwin's Law
I once said that I thought that the olympics were pointless.
It ended with some guy liking me to Hitler.
If he would then that would mean that he's saying that I'm hosting the olympics.Cody211282 said:Yea but didn't he host the Olympics? So should he have said people who host it are like Hitler?Hubilub said:Godwin's Law
I once said that I thought that the olympics were pointless.
It ended with some guy liking me to Hitler.
Well to be completely accurate, Godwin's Law isn't itself a logical fallacy - it's the rule of internet behavior that states, if carried out for long enough, all arguments eventually reach the point where comparisons to Hitler are made. It is constantly being proven accurate as you've noticed.Hubilub said:Godwin's Law
I once said that I thought that the olympics were pointless.
It ended with some guy liking me to Hitler.
Ironic, that. Nazis were very much into their Olympics, so far as I know.Hubilub said:Godwin's Law
I once said that I thought that the Olympics were pointless.
It ended with some guy liking me to Hitler.
I believe the way it was used can be considered a logical fallacy though.Gildan Bladeborn said:Well to be completely accurate, Godwin's Law isn't itself a logical fallacy - it's the rule of internet behavior that states, if carried out for long enough, all arguments eventually reach the point where comparisons to Hitler are made. It is constantly being proven accurate as you've noticed.Hubilub said:Godwin's Law
I once said that I thought that the olympics were pointless.
It ended with some guy liking me to Hitler.
The Olympics are pointless though.
or it would just prove he was a retard, like his other statement did, I still can't get my brain around how he said you were like hitler.Hubilub said:If he would then that would mean that he's saying that I'm hosting the olympics.Cody211282 said:Yea but didn't he host the Olympics? So should he have said people who host it are like Hitler?Hubilub said:Godwin's Law
I once said that I thought that the olympics were pointless.
It ended with some guy liking me to Hitler.
Which means that he's saying that the people hosting the Olympics don't actually care about sports.
So... he was agreeing with me while calling me Hitler...
I guess that is what you call "disrespectfully agreeing" with someone.
I believe it was when he was trying to disprove my own opinion.Cody211282 said:I still can't get my brain around how he said you were like hitler.
Oh certainly, but the example you've cited is hardly the only way misguided internet debaters compare their opponents in some way to Hitler - all of those methods are of course also logical fallacies, but what Godwin's Law describes is just the increasing likelihood that somebody will use Hitler in a logical fallacy as an argument drags on, not any specific logical fallacy involving Hitler.Hubilub said:I believe the way it was used can be considered a logical fallacy though.
It went something like a person defending me saying "Can't you respect his opinion? All opinions are equal"
Then the guy says "You can think the same of all opinions. Hitler's opinion shouldn't be considered right, and neither should his"
So basically, because Hitler had an opinion, I'm not allowed to have an opinion.
That's a logical fallacy, right?
... Then what should I call it?Gildan Bladeborn said:Oh certainly, but the example you've cited is hardly the only way misguided internet debaters compare their opponents in some way to Hitler - all of those methods are of course also logical fallacies, but what Godwin's Law describes is just the increasing likelihood that somebody will use Hitler in a logical fallacy as an argument drags on, not any specific logical fallacy involving Hitler.Hubilub said:I believe the way it was used can be considered a logical fallacy though.
It went something like a person defending me saying "Can't you respect his opinion? All opinions are equal"
Then the guy says "You can think the same of all opinions. Hitler's opinion shouldn't be considered right, and neither should his"
So basically, because Hitler had an opinion, I'm not allowed to have an opinion.
That's a logical fallacy, right?