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by telemachos
5836 days ago
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> That's a straw man. He said: "it's probably impossible to structure any kind of discussion without introducing [a fallacy]". Because you can't avoid fallacies doesn't mean that pointing to (some of) them is pointless. Here's his full sentence: Human language and the totality of knowledge is not a formal system with complete rules and non-contradictions, therefore not only will an elimination of fallacies not lead anywhere, it's probably impossible to structure any kind of discussion without introducing one. The key bit to me is "therefore not only will an elimination of fallacies not lead anywhere." You may be right about his larger meaning, but I take that part of the sentence to mean that there is no point in eliminating fallacies ("not lead anywhere"). |
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I'm insisting because I can't believe that someone actually think that no fallacy is worth eliminating. Unless he state it without ambiguity. Daniel didn't. Plus, he stated the difference between debate and conversation. I think we can equate "mutual understanding" with "search for the truth" here.
So Daniel, would you tell us what you actually think? Are some fallacies worth eliminating? Can the human language be truth seeking?