Arlo's unhealthy technique for arguing.  


 

1. Carry your opponent's proposition beyond its natural limits; exaggerate it. 
The more general your opponent's statement becomes, the more objections you can 
find against it. The more restricted and narrow your own propositions remain, 
the easier they are to defend.

 

2. Use different meanings of your opponent's words to refute his argument.

Example: Person A says, "You do not understand the mysteries of Kant's 
philosophy." Person B replies, "Oh, if it's mysteries you're talking about, 
I'll have nothing to do with them."

 

3. Ignore your opponent's proposition, which was intended to refer to some 
particular thing. Rather, understand it in some quite different sense, and then 
refute it. Attack something different than what was asserted.

 

4. Hide your conclusion from your opponent until the end. Mingle your premises 
here and there in your talk. Get your opponent to agree to them in no definite 
order. By this circuitous route you conceal your goal until you have reached 
all the admissions necessary to reach your goal.

 

5. Use your opponent's beliefs against him. If your opponent refuses to accept 
your premises, use his own premises to your advantage.

Example: If the opponent is a member of an organization or a religious sect to 
which you do not belong, you may employ the declared opinions of this group 
against the opponent.

 

6. Confuse the issue by changing your opponent's words or what he or she seeks 
to prove.

Example: Call something by a different name: "good repute" instead of "honor," 
"virtue" instead of "virginity," "red-blooded" instead of "vertebrates."

 

7. State your proposition and show the truth of it by asking the opponent many 
questions. By asking many wide-reaching questions at once, you may hide what 
you want to get admitted. Then you quickly propound the argument resulting from 
the opponent's admissions.

 

8. Make your opponent angry. An angry person is less capable of using judgment 
or perceiving where his or her advantage lies.

 

9. Use your opponent's answers to your questions to reach different or even 
opposite conclusions.

 

10. If your opponent answers all your questions negatively and refuses to grant 
you any points, ask him or her to concede the opposite of your premises. This 
may confuse the opponent as to which point you actually seek him to concede.

 

11. If the opponent grants you the truth of some of your premises, refrain from 
asking him or her to agree to your conclusion. Later, introduce your conclusion 
as a settled and admitted fact. Your opponent and others in attendance may come 
to believe that your conclusion was admitted.

 

12. If the argument turns upon general ideas with no particular names, you must 
use language or a metaphor that is favorable to your proposition.

Example: What an impartial person would call "public worship" or a "system of 
religion" is described by an adherent as "piety" or "godliness" and by an 
opponent as "bigotry" or "superstition." In other words, inset what you intend 
to prove into the definition of the idea.

 

13. To make your opponent accept a proposition, you must give him an opposite, 
counter-proposition as well. If the contrast is glaring, the opponent will 
accept your proposition to avoid being paradoxical.

Example: If you want him to admit that a boy must do everything that his father 
tells him to do, ask him, "whether in all things we must obey or disobey our 
parents." Or, if a thing is said to occur "often," ask whether you are to 
understand "often" to mean few or many times, the opponent will say "many." It 
is as though you were to put gray next to black and call it white, or gray next 
to white and call it black.

 

14. Try to bluff your opponent. If he or she has answered several of your 
questions without the answers turning out in favor of your conclusion, advance 
your conclusion triumphantly, even if it does not follow. If your opponent is 
shy or stupid, and you yourself possess a great deal of impudence and a good 
voice, the technique may succeed.

 

15. If you wish to advance a proposition that is difficult to prove, put it 
aside for the moment. Instead, submit for your opponent's acceptance or 
rejection some true proposition, as though you wished to draw your proof from 
it. Should the opponent reject it because he suspects a trick, you can obtain 
your triumph by showing how absurd the opponent is to reject an obviously true 
proposition. Should the opponent accept it, you now have reason on your side 
for the moment. You can either try to prove your original proposition, as in 
#14, or maintain that your original proposition is proved by what your opponent 
accepted. For this an extreme degree of impudence is required, but experience 
shows cases of it succeeding.

 

16. When your opponent puts forth a proposition, find it inconsistent with his 
or her other statements, beliefs, actions or lack of action.

Example: Should your opponent defend suicide, you may at once exclaim, "Why 
don't you hang yourself?" Should the opponent maintain that his city is an 
unpleasant place to live, you may say, "Why don't you leave on the first plane?"

 

17. If your opponent presses you with a counter-proof, you will often be able 
to save yourself by advancing some subtle distinction. Try to find a second 
meaning or an ambiguous sense for your opponent's idea.

 

18. If your opponent has taken up a line of argument that will end in your 
defeat, you must not allow him to carry it to its conclusion. Interrupt the 
dispute, break it off altogether, or lead the opponent to a different subject.

 

19. Should your opponent expressly challenge you to produce any objection to 
some definite point in his argument, and you have nothing to say, try to make 
the argument less specific.

Example: If you are asked why a particular hypothesis cannot be accepted, you 
may speak of the fallibility of human knowledge, and give various illustrations 
of it.

 

20. If your opponent has admitted to all or most of your premises, do not ask 
him or her directly to accept your conclusion. Rather, draw the conclusion 
yourself as if it too had been admitted.

 

21. When your opponent uses an argument that is superficial and you see the 
falsehood, you can refute it by setting forth its superficial character. But it 
is better to meet the opponent with a counter-argument that is just as 
superficial, and so dispose of him. For it is with victory that you are 
concerned, not with truth.

Example: If the opponent appeals to prejudice or emotion, or attacks you 
personally, return the attack in the same manner.

 

22. If your opponent asks you to admit something from which the point in 
dispute will immediately follow, you must refuse to do so, declaring that it 
begs the question.

 

23. Contradiction and contention irritate a person into exaggerating his 
statements. By contradicting your opponent you may drive him into extending the 
statement beyond its natural limit. When you then contradict the exaggerated 
form of it, you look as though you had refuted the original statement. 
Contrarily, if your opponent tries to extend your own statement further than 
you intended, redefine your statement's limits and say, "That is what I said, 
no more."

 

24. State a false syllogism. Your opponent makes a proposition, and by false 
inference and distortion of his ideas you force from the proposition other 
propositions that are not intended and that appear absurd. It then appears that 
your opponent's proposition gave rise to these inconsistencies, and so it 
appears to be indirectly refuted.

 

25. If your opponent is making a generalization, find an instance to the 
contrary. Only one valid contradiction is needed to overthrow the opponent's 
proposition.

Example: "All ruminants are horned," is a generalization that may be upset by 
the single instance of the camel.

 

26. A brilliant move is to turn the tables and use your opponent's arguments 
against himself.

Example: Your opponent declares, "So and so is a child, you must make an 
allowance for him." You retort, "Just because he is a child, I must correct 
him; otherwise he will persist in his bad habits."

 

27. Should your opponent surprise you by becoming particularly angry at an 
argument, you must urge it with all the more zeal. No only will this make your 
opponent angry, but it will appear that you have put your finger on the weak 
side of his case, and your opponent is more open to attack on this point than 
you expected.

 

28. When the audience consists of individuals (or a person) who are not experts 
on a subject, you make an invalid objection to your opponent who seems to be 
defeated in the eyes of the audience. This strategy is particularly effective 
if your objection makes your opponent look ridiculous or if the audience 
laughs. If your opponent must make a long, winded and complicated explanation 
to correct you, the audience will not be disposed to listen to him.

 

29. If you find that you are being beaten, you can create a diversion-that is, 
you can suddenly begin to talk of something else, as though it had a bearing on 
the matter in dispute. This may be done without presumption that the diversion 
has some general bearing on the matter.

 

30. Make an appeal to authority rather than reason. If your opponent respects 
an authority or an expert, quote that authority to further your case. If 
needed, quote what the authority said in some other sense or circumstance. 
Authorities that your opponent fails to understand are those which he generally 
admires the most. You may also, should it be necessary, not only twist your 
authorities, but actually falsify them, or quote something that you have 
entirely invented yourself.

 

31. If you know that you have no reply to the arguments that your opponent 
advances, you by a fine stroke of irony declare yourself to be an incompetent 
judge.

Example: "What you say passes my poor powers of comprehension; it may well be 
all very true, but I can't understand it, and I refrain from any expression of 
opinion on it." In this way you insinuate to the audience, with whom you are in 
good repute, that what your opponent says is nonsense. This technique may be 
used only when you are quite sure that the audience thinks much better of you 
than your opponent.

 

32. A quick way of getting rid of an opponent's assertion, or of throwing 
suspicion on it, is by putting it into some odious category.

Example: You can say, "That is fascism" or "atheism" or "superstition." In 
making an objection of this kind you take for granted:

1. That the assertion or question is identical with, or at least contained in, 
the category cited; and

2. The system referred to has been entirely refuted.

 

33. You admit your opponent's premises but deny the conclusion.

Example: "That's all very well in theory, but it won't work in practice."

 

34. When you state a question or an argument, and your opponent gives you no 
direct answer, or evades it with a counter-question, or tries to change the 
subject, it is sure sign you have touched a weak spot, sometimes without 
intending to do so. You have, as it were, reduced your opponent to silence. You 
must, therefore, urge the point all the more, and not let your opponent evade 
it, even when you do not know where the weakness that you have hit upon really 
lies.

 

35. Instead of working on an opponent's intellect or the rigor of his 
arguments, work on his motive. If you succeed in making your opponent's 
opinion-should it prove true-seem distinctly prejudicial to his own interest, 
he will drop it immediately.

Example: A clergyman is defending some philosophical dogma. You show him that 
his proposition contradicts a fundamental doctrine of his church. He will 
abandon the argument.

 

36. You may also puzzle and bewilder your opponent by mere bombast. If your 
opponent is weak or does not wish to appear as if he has no idea what you are 
talking about, you can easily impose upon him some argument that sounds very 
deep or learned, or that sounds indisputable.

 

37. Should your opponent be in the right but, luckily for you, choose a faulty 
proof, you can easily refute it and then claim that you have refuted the whole 
position. This is the way in which bad advocates lose good cases. If no 
accurate proof occurs to your opponent, you have won the day.

 

38. Become personal, insulting and rude as soon as you perceive that your 
opponent has the upper hand. In becoming personal you leave the subject 
altogether, and turn your attack on the person by remarks of an offensive and 
spiteful character. This is a very popular technique, because it takes so 
little skill to put it into effect.

 
___
 

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