Difference between revisions of "Perfectionism straw-man"

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==About==
 
==About==
A [[perfectionism straw-man]] is any [[argument]] of the general form "we can never do X perfectly, therefore there is no point in trying to do X at all", i.e. replacing a possibly-realistic goal with a [[straw-man]] goal of perfection. It can also be seen as a form of [[moving the goalposts]], where the goalposts are moved infinitely far away.
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A [[perfectionism straw-man]] is any [[argument]] of the general form "we can never do ''X'' perfectly, therefore there is no point in trying to do ''X'' at all", i.e. replacing a possibly-realistic goal with a [[straw-man]] goal of perfection. It can also be seen as a form of [[moving the goalposts]], where the goalposts are moved infinitely far away, and as an example of [[all-or-nothing thinking]].
  
 
This argument is generally used to maintain the status quo by discussing change in terms suggesting that anything short of perfection would be unsatisfactory.
 
This argument is generally used to maintain the status quo by discussing change in terms suggesting that anything short of perfection would be unsatisfactory.
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==Related==
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* The [[wikipedia:Nirvana fallacy|Nirvana fallacy]] is any instance "of comparing actual things with unrealistic, idealized alternatives", which would therefore be a superset of the [[perfectionism straw-man]].
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* The [[wikipedia:perfect solution fallacy|perfect solution fallacy]] assumes "that a solution should be rejected because some part of the problem would still exist after it were implemented".
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* The problem posed by the [[perfectionism straw-man]] is often expressed as "[[wikipedia:perfect is the enemy of good|perfect is the enemy of good]]".
 
==Example==
 
==Example==
A reasonable goal of ''reducing'' evil, or reducing the harm done by evil, or reducing evil in a certain specified context, becomes the impossible goal of ''eliminating all'' evil.
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A reasonable goal of ''reducing'' evil, or reducing the harm done by evil, or reducing evil in a certain specified context, is dismissed as being equivalent to the impossible goal of ''eliminating all'' evil.
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==Notes==
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This term was first proposed [https://plus.google.com/u/0/102282887764745350285/posts/QbXt9VZSQKQ on Google+] on 2013-05-22.

Latest revision as of 13:51, 23 May 2013

About

A perfectionism straw-man is any argument of the general form "we can never do X perfectly, therefore there is no point in trying to do X at all", i.e. replacing a possibly-realistic goal with a straw-man goal of perfection. It can also be seen as a form of moving the goalposts, where the goalposts are moved infinitely far away, and as an example of all-or-nothing thinking.

This argument is generally used to maintain the status quo by discussing change in terms suggesting that anything short of perfection would be unsatisfactory.

Related

Example

A reasonable goal of reducing evil, or reducing the harm done by evil, or reducing evil in a certain specified context, is dismissed as being equivalent to the impossible goal of eliminating all evil.

Notes

This term was first proposed on Google+ on 2013-05-22.