Sunday, September 18, 2011

VOCABULARY FOR SEPTEMBER 23

SLIPPERY SLOPE: The Slippery Slope is a fallacy in which a person asserts that some event must inevitably follow from another without any argument for the inevitability of the event in question. In most cases, there are a series of steps or gradations between one event and the one in question and no reason is given as to why the intervening steps or gradations will simply be bypassed. This "argument" has the following form:

1. Event X has occurred (or will or might occur).
2. Therefore event Y will inevitably happen.

This sort of "reasoning" is fallacious because there is no reason to believe that one event must inevitably follow from another without an argument for such a claim. This is especially clear in cases in which there is a significant number of steps or gradations between one event and another.

Example: "You can never give anyone a break. If you do, they'll walk all over you."

STRAW MAN FALLACY
: The Straw Man fallacy is committed when a person simply ignores a person's actual position and substitutes a distorted, exaggerated or misrepresented version of that position. This sort of "reasoning" has the following pattern:
1. Person A has position X.
2. Person B presents position Y (which is a distorted version of X).
3. Person B attacks position Y.
4. Therefore X is false/incorrect/flawed.
This sort of "reasoning" is fallacious because attacking a distorted version of a position simply does not constitute an attack on the position itself. One might as well expect an attack on a poor drawing of a person to hurt the person.
Example of Straw Man:
Bill and Jill are arguing about cleaning out their closets:
Jill: "We should clean out the closets. They are getting a bit messy."
Bill: "Why, we just went through those closets last year. Do we have to clean them out everyday?"
Jill: "I never said anything about cleaning them out every day. You just want too keep all your junk forever, which is just ridiculous."

ANTITHESIS
: From the Greek, "opposition"
A rhetorical term for the juxtaposition of contrasting ideas in balanced phrases or clauses. Plural: antitheses. Adjective: antithetical.
Example of Antithesis:
"Everybody doesn't like something, but nobody doesn't like Sara Lee."
(advertising slogan)

KAIROS: The opportune occasion for speech. The term kairos has a rich and varied history, but generally refers to the way a given context for communication both calls for and constrains one's speech. Thus, sensitive to kairos, a speaker or writer takes into account the contingencies of a given place and time, and considers the opportunities within this specific context for words to be effective and appropriate to that moment.

3 comments:

  1. can you give an example for kairos please? :)

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  2. I thought that straw man was making someone seem easier to defeat than they really are, like oversimplifying something they said... (and I didn't know there had to be like a conversation where both parts were involved.)
    Is it right to say a straw man would be like, "Presidential candidate X will allow more illegal immigrants to enter our country," when really X had said something in a speech like "Because of our low budget, i will not support the building of a new wall on the Mexico-US border."

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  3. oh, and by the way i feel honored to be used in teh straw man example...

    ReplyDelete