Can someone explain to me how the tu quoque argument works?
Lets say a mom smokes cigarettes and then tells her son that he shouldn't smoke cigarettes to which the son responds, "how can you tell me not to smoke when you do it too?"
1) Is this an example of a tu quoque fallacy?
2) Who is committing the fallacy, the mother or the son?
If it is the son who is committing the fallacy (which I think is how the fallacy works), then is this not just an example of the son calling the mother a hypocrite? And does that mean that any accusation of hypocrisy is a logical fallacy?
And, as a slight derail to my own thread, why is hypocrisy wrong?
Lets say a mom smokes cigarettes and then tells her son that he shouldn't smoke cigarettes to which the son responds, "how can you tell me not to smoke when you do it too?"
1) Is this an example of a tu quoque fallacy?
2) Who is committing the fallacy, the mother or the son?
If it is the son who is committing the fallacy (which I think is how the fallacy works), then is this not just an example of the son calling the mother a hypocrite? And does that mean that any accusation of hypocrisy is a logical fallacy?
And, as a slight derail to my own thread, why is hypocrisy wrong?