Happy Sunny Skeplandia!–Doesn’t exist…
We skeptics alert the public all the time when we identify a certain fallacy in marketing and debate. We imagine that we are talking to an equally minded demographic, however, and that they will accept our logically reasoned arguments. I am always confused by this strange place in which I live. Everything tends to make so much sense, but many care nothing for it. I used to innocently think that it was because some people had an eye for it, and others had their eyes on other things. It turns out that many other stances on the ethical use of logic exist. Many use logic for their own selfish purposes. I just don’t get what to do when I want to play fair, but the other party just wants to cheat and steal with every word he negotiates.
Been out lately?
Logic is a tool. It can be used for truth or profit.
Just because an argument is sound, does not make it valid.
Lets face reality: this is not some occult secretive scientific theory, we all knew this profound fact when we all said our first lie. We thought of a clever cover story, that fit the events conveniently, and got away with it. Most of us dabbled in lying and found it to be generally harmful in the long run, and I do believe that most of us don’t bother lying because it is not worth the trouble. However, in all arts, there are some trouble makers that become expert liars, and have found a way to lie for profit.
These people do not care about the truth, they just want to justify what they’re selling.
Ad Hominems, Arguing from Ignorance, False Correlations, etc… are certainly dangerous in the wrong hands. Fallacies tend to disguise themselves as clever thought, and many people are both deceiving others and themselves by their use.
The worst: sometimes they don’t even realize that they’re being logically rude; they don’t even know they’re committing fallacies.
Many people, rich and poor, suffer from poor reasoning.
Or so it seems? Can fallacies be profitable? For example, remember that bully who called you names? He profited greatly by this intimidation, and heck, you may have even given him your lunch money or done his homework.
Imagine wanting to be illogical, for the sake of certain gains?
How do you reason with someone who is reasonable, but chooses to fight unreasonably? Someone who is actively and consciously committing fallacies because he knows that the general public will fall for them? Every time you call this person out on his Ad Hoc, or his Argument from Popularity, he strategically repeats it, pretending that he doesn’t understand you.
To weaker philosophers, they may bulk to the confidence of this person, and contemplate if what they just reasoned to him was nonsensical (even though it was actually a good point!).
Should one persist? Do not accept his red herrings and keep on the path. If this naughty logician feels trapped in admitting he is being absurd, then he may get angry. Indeed, if he is caught dealing unfairly, he is both shown to be a poor philosopher for being caught, and a poor businessman who needs to scam to get ahead. For the sake of pride, he will stubbornly persist in his fantasy, and the conversation will naturally break down.
So how is it done? How shall we reason in an unreasonable world?











































