JavaScript is required to use Bungie.net

Varios

Navega una corriente de discusiones aleatorias.
12/7/2016 12:52:24 PM
47

In this post-truth world we live in...

As you may or may not have heard, the Oxford Dictionary's Word of the Year for 2016 is "post-truth". [quote][url=https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/post-truth][b]post-truth[/b][/url] Relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief:[/quote] As I would like to think most people would agree, typically, when someone posits an argument based on emotion, when there is relevant objective data available, the gold-standard of rebuttal is to make an argument based on what the data says. However, in this post-truth world we live in now, where people are too easily swayed by what merely [i]sounds[/i] good, how best should we respond? Do we stand our ground and continue to assert the facts? Do we meet them on their level with similar material of what [i]sounds[/i] good? Do we bend the truth, misrepresent the facts, and falsify information if it helps achieve our goals, even if those goals are noble causes; is the ends beginning to justify the means? I'd be curious to hear about any other stories you have of post-truths and how, if you did, respond to them.

Publicando en idioma:

 

Pórtate bien. Echa un vistazo a nuestro Código de conducta antes de publicar tu mensaje. Cancelar Editar Crear escuadra Publicar

Ver el resto del tema
  • Each argument has a different "best" response. In a pre-arranged debate, obviously the outcome depends on which party can best present their data, using emotional appeals as sparingly as possible in favour of other persuasive techniques. Any other situation is almost certain to be completely different when both sides are arguing a case. If you're getting into an argument with somebody over the internet or in person, generally the person standing their ground isn't going to convince others to see their view; so much as get shit flung at them for refusing to change their mind, regardless of their argument being based in data or emotion. We're kind of toxic that way. Honestly it's normally of little consequence to me whether i win most of my arguments or not. If I see things are going south I tend to just humour the other people. It's not worth my time when each of my posts are just going to be even longer than the last as I repeat myself ad verbatim, to some guy ignoring the argument altogether and sharing knowyourfallacy links in the complete wrong context while messaging his friends to manipulate the karma of each post just so he can look cool. TL;DR: It's not really worth it. Most people have their minds made up about the issues worth arguing about anyway, and trying to convince somebody their views are wrong turns them into an extremely rude person, regardless of the accuracy of your data.

    Publicando en idioma:

     

    Pórtate bien. Echa un vistazo a nuestro Código de conducta antes de publicar tu mensaje. Cancelar Editar Crear escuadra Publicar

No se te permite acceder a este contenido.
;
preload icon
preload icon
preload icon