Argument/attack

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Revision as of 12:53, 8 May 2016 by Woozle (talk | contribs) (target audience)
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About

An attack on an argument is anything which appears to damage the argument's credibility. The essence of an attack can be either rational or non-rational.

Rationally, the only valid attack on an argument is one which shows flaws in either the premises or the logic connecting those premises to the argument's conclusion.

non-rational

Non-rational forms of attack either attempt to engage the emotions of others in order to bypass logic (appeal to emotion), or to employ distortions of logic (logical fallacy) which may convince others to accept illogical conclusions. Typically, these two are used in tandem: a logical fallacy provides a cover of reasonableness for a conclusion which the listener has already been primed to want to believe.

Rather than attack an argument directly, an attacker may attempt to draw attention away from its conclusion via other means (the non-argument forms of rhetorical deception, which should probably be categorized as rhetorical distraction).

The target audience for a non-rational attack may not be the participant who advanced the argument in the first place, but rather a third party (typically an audience) who may be more easily swayed for any of several possible reasons. Attackers may even exploit particular audience vulnerabilities by fielding arguments that seem relatively innocuous or possibly nonsensical on a rational level, but which play on certain beliefs or cultural triggers likely to be present in the audience (see dogwhistle).

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