As usual, I am cross-posting this at "A Soldier for Jesus".
The straw man fallacy — everybody does it, it seems. Especially when getting caught up in the emotion of an argument ("argument" in the common sense, not the classical discussion sense). However, it is my belief that many people choose to use this fallacy for the sake of provoking emotion in their opponent. If the opponent falls for the trick, then the antagonist can provoke further and "win" the argument on emotion, not facts.
"What on Earth are you babbling about, Cowboy Bob?"
Be patient, Nicky. Just showing how it's used. Now to tell you what it is, and maybe you can remember the traps of this nature that have been set for you. Or that I have set; sometimes it is fun to "give it back", but it is not productive in a rational discussion.
In simplest terms, the straw man argument is when someone will take your statement, argument, beliefs or position and build a false version of it to tear down. The straw man they built is a mockery or misrepresentation of your actual position. It is often an inadvertent mistake based on misunderstanding of your position; perhaps you did not state it very well. Other times, it is an advertent attack, as I mentioned earlier. It almost always involved putting words in your mouth, assuming that you said something that you did not say.
When Trish wrote about modestly for Christian women and Facebook evangelism, atheists went hysterical. Even on her own Weblog, they made emotive straw man arguments like:
- Are you ashamed of your own body Trish? Sounds like you got problems with your own self-image. A lot of women are not. And your facebook evangelism, can be best summed up as "Trolling". This was followed by the Facebook Terms of Service, taken horribly out of context.
- Why not purchase special apparel designed especially for those women whose religious views encourages them to cover their bodies in the name of modesty. I think they're called "Burqas" and they're available in any color you like so long as it's black. Note the absurd extreme used in the mockery.
- Next you will be saying we all need to wear baggy sweats and over-sized t-shirts so no man can see our shape at all (or a burqa, as someone else suggested). Maybe we shouldn't wear makeup; that could make us look too sexy. Again, you can see the extreme that was not taken in the original article.
- Creationist homeschoolers, you can only shield your kids from reality for so long. That is a horrible misrepresentation of the position of the homeschoolers. First, it implies dishonesty on the part of the homeschoolers because they are lying to their children about "reality". Second, it implies that "reality" is on the side of the accuser, not the homeschooler. Third, this troll simply horned in on a discussion. So, who asked you?
- I think you should stop trying to learn science from fundie propaganda sites. Assuming that I do not know about science because I oppose evolutionism. Also note the pejorative words.
- No atheist believes everything came from nothing. You should read about the big bang before you assume what we believe. Interesting. This one does not seem to know some of the details in the position he holds. Plus, he assumed that I did not know anything about atheist beliefs. (Hey, isn't "atheist beliefs" an oxymoron?) He was not interested in the support of my claim that atheists believe everything came from nothing.
I will close by sending you to two excellent (read: better) articles. First, this one at Confident Christianity's Weblog, and this one at Apologia. Hopefully, I gave you something useful. Read the other two now that you're done here, and you'll be much less likely to be fooled, capice?







