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This book is a crash course, meant to catapult you into a world where you start to see things how they really are, not how you think they are. The focus of this book is on logical fallacies, which loosely defined, are simply errors in reasoning. With the reading of each page, you can make significant improvements in the way you reason and make decisions.
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Firstly it's important in discussions to agree on a definition of a word, otherwise you can have people making cases based on entirely different things. Sex is fairly vague and, while I understand what you most likely mean by it, your definition is only one of a range of definitions. Bill Clinton famously had a different idea of what sexual relations meant than probably most people.
So, whilst you consider sex to be a consensual act, rape is technicality a sexual act, whether it's sexually motivated (though it may not be), or a sex crime, or simple considered a sex act by the mechanics. There are other terms which are less ambiguous, and I suspect in trying to be polite you may have substituted one as it's swearing or profanity, but which I would consider to be a consensual act, but again you're better off discussing and exploring the definition and trying to come to a concensus rather than just have your own intransigent opinion and be damned. On the topic of no true Scotsman, which irrelevantly I am, my initial reaction is absolutely not.* That requires a category or classification of person, with a claim that they don't do something. Two classic examples of this which I grew up with are that no true Scotsman :
Both are factually incorrect, tradition does not disqualify someone from a nationality. In fact it's a form of bigotry, dismissing someone else's opinion simply because it doesn't match your own. Obviously this doesn't just apply to Scotsmen, so an example may be no true Liverpool supporter would want Manchester United to win in the champions league. *Without seeing exactly what was said I can't say for sure, but I can't imagine how what you described could be NTS. Is there a different fallacy? Possibly argument by pigheadedness<>? |
answered on Monday, Jul 09, 2018 01:12:07 AM by Bryan |
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