Ana the Ist
Aggressively serene!
- Feb 21, 2012
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go right ahead
I'm not going to go into the dictionary definition...that's something clearly available to you and it hasn't helped much so far.
During an argument, one person creates a strawman when he cannot argue against the point his opponent has made. Instead, he creates a point that his opponent hasn't made...and then he argues against that. Let's look at an example where you and I are arguing about evolution and you create a strawman...
Me: Evolution is true!
You: Evolution is Satan's lie!
Me: I can show you literally hundreds of pieces of evidence from multiple scientific disciplines supporting the theory of evolution!
You: You just want to reduce mankind to a bunch of animals so you can engage in premarital sex guilt-free! (Strawman)
In this purely hypothetical example, your second statement is a strawman. It has nothing to do with any of the points I made (I made two points, that evolution is true and there's lots of evidence for it) and instead of addressing the points I made...it's an attempt to attack the perceived motives I have for defending evolution. It is a strawman created for the purpose of attacking.
Now let's look at the teapot analogy that you thought was a strawman. Keep in mind, I'll just be paraphrasing here...
You: God exists and no one has ever proven otherwise!
Atheist: That's silly. The burden of proof for god's existence is on you to demonstrate...not the other way around.
You: You're just saying that since you can't handle the truth! If you could prove god doesn't exist...you would!
Atheist: Imagine that I claimed a teapot was floating out in space somewhere between the earth and the sun...would it be true if you couldn't prove it wasn't true? (Burden of proof analogy, aka Russel's teapot)
You: Strawman!
Atheist: *facepalm*
Do you see the difference between the two examples now? In the first example, you're attacking a position I don't actually hold. That's a strawman. In the second example, the atheist just wants you to consider the analogy so you can better understand the concept of "burden of proof". That's an analogy...not a strawman.
I know the term strawman gets used incorrectly a lot, so don't feel bad about this. The important thing is that now you understand the difference and can use the term correctly.
No need to thank me...virtue is it's own reward.
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