I thoroughly dislike the "Hitler Ate Sugar" fallacy - the the idea that your argument is flawed/inferior because bad people have embraced it or something similar to it.
I couldn't even count the amount of time I've been called a fanboy or an "EA apologist" for not jumping on the hate bandwagon.Navvan said:EA Fanboy -> Does not think the situation was EA's fault
A person does not think the scenario is EA's fault -> EA Fanboy
Is the three year old was riding his bike on the wrong side of the road and got hit by a car that is an accident caused by her. She was in violation of the law and was the cause of the accident. Being the victim does not invalidate that.Meatspinner said:Victim blaming in general.
Where the hell do you get of blaming a 3 year old for getting hit by a car?
As a counterpoint, I find this one is quite funny when someone just blurts it out during a joking argument. This usually happens when my friends and I are playing the Battlestar Galactica boardgame: "Of course you would play that card, that's what a Cylon would do!"lacktheknack said:I thoroughly dislike the "Hitler Ate Sugar" fallacy - the the idea that your argument is flawed/inferior because bad people have embraced it or something similar to it.
Ahahaha. Let's take the classic example of reductio ad absurdum:Res Plus said:You seem to be struggling with "absurdum", let me help you out... It doesn't mean to a logical extreme it means to the absurd.
"The Latin phrase reductio ad absurdum means "reduction to the absurd." It is used to refer to the process of demonstrating that an idea is probably false by first assuming its truth, and then showing how that truth leads to absurd conclusions which cannot possibly be true. The process is also used in ethical philosophy by assuming the moral validity of some principle, and then showing that acceptance of it would lead to very unethical consequences."
If an argument is incorrect it is extremely likely that the conclusion drawn is incorrect.wizzy555 said:The Fallacy fallacy - Your argument is incorrect therefore your conclusion is incorrect - not necessarily true, it just means that this particular argument should be dismissed.
Also trigger happy fallacy spotting. For instance, slippery slope arguments aren't automatically fallacious, it depends heavily on the details of the situation.
Actually, bestiality is legal in more states than gay marriage. Just had to point that out.Alternative said:The Slippery Slope argument. Mostly when it's used to argue against gay marriage.
How the hell is allowing gay people to marry going to lead to beastiality or men marrying cars?
So if I said "it is wrong to rape children" and am a creationist...then what are you saying here?Lexodus said:Literally anything said by a Creationist, ever.