WTF are you talking about, of course he can. He can define "feminism" any way he likes as his initial premise which he uses to state his reasoning WHY that definition of feminism applies in the particular circumstances he is encompassing with his argument. You are free to disagree with his definition of feminism, and you are free to state another definition and defend that, but it is perfectly rational and reasonable for someone stating a premise of an argument, ie: "Feminists are all man-hating cunts," to use that definition as the basis for his argument proving (or disproving) that thesis.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:You simply cannot define what feminism is when arguing with someone that self-identifies as a feminist or is putting a feminist POV - or define anything else for that matter!
It's not a strawman, it's a set of premises upon which his argument is founded. For example:Beginning a discussion by telling someone else what they think and believe is just about as strawmaniacal as you can get!
P1 "Feminists have the following characteristics: (what follows is a list of particular characteristics of what he believes comprises feminists)"
P2 "Feminists with the above characteristics demonstrate a hatred of the male of the species."
C1 Therefore, feminists are man hating cunts.
According to the internal logic, this is a valid syllogism. Where you seem to disagree is with his description of feminists, which of course you are free to do. You may argue that not all feminists bear those characteristics, and therefore the syllogism fails on its first premise if you like, but it is not a strawman fallacy for him to claim that premise in his argument.
A strawman fallacy would be if you said that all feminists are tolerant, peaceful, man-loving individuals and his reply ignored, distorted or misstated your original premise. For example, if he replied "You just admitted that feminists are all cunts, and therefore blah, blah, blah" That is a strawman argument.
A strawman argument is a response to a premise stated by someone else that presents the original premise in a distorting, dishonest or misstated fashion. There is no such thing as a strawman premise.
That may be, but it's a valid premise for an argument. In a reasonable debate, your duty is to deconstruct whatever argument he makes in support of that premise, not simply reject it by assuming a priori that his premise is false or faulty. The presumed insult you refer to is a function of you imposing an entirely one-sided definition of "feminist" as a scientific fact that cannot be disputed or challenged.It's much the same as accusing all christians of being YECs - deeply patronising and rightly dismissed out of hand by anyone with whom you are debating.
He says, "Feminists are man-haters"
You say, "You're making a strawman argument because feminists are not man-haters."
What you are doing is a classic example of the fallacy of begging the question.
The whole point of making a claim, or stating a premise, is to set the base conditions for a debate, which means that the burden is on him to provide arguments in support of his premise, and for you to rebut his arguments and offer counter arguments of your own showing why his premise is false.Begging the Question is a fallacy in which the premises include the claim that the conclusion is true or (directly or indirectly) assume that the conclusion is true. This sort of "reasoning" typically has the following form.
Premises in which the truth of the conclusion is claimed or the truth of the conclusion is assumed (either directly or indirectly).
Claim C (the conclusion) is true.
This sort of "reasoning" is fallacious because simply assuming that the conclusion is true (directly or indirectly) in the premises does not constitute evidence for that conclusion. Obviously, simply assuming a claim is true does not serve as evidence for that claim. This is especially clear in particularly blatant cases: "X is true. The evidence for this claim is that X is true."
Nonsense. the fallacy of appeal to authority is only a fallacy if the authority cited is not in fact an authority on the subject. "Joe Blow has proven that all feminists are man-hating cunts" can either be a valid evidential argument or it can be an appeal to authority fallacy. It depends entirely on what the CV of Joe happens to be and whether he's a recognized expert in identifying feminist cunts.Even if you can back up your definition with references and citations, you are still committing an "Argument from Authority" fallacy - which is often no better than a strawman, or, at best, only a marginal improvement.
Saying "Richard Dawkins has demonstrated how the evolutionary process results in changes to species morphology over time" is an appeal to authority argument, but it is not necessarily a fallacious appeal.
I agree with you. Criticizing feminism is the same thing as insulting Mohammed. In the eyes of feminists, their particular definition of feminism is inherently and indisputably correct, and any challenge cannot be based in reason or logic, but must instead come from bias and bigotry on the part of the questioner.Though you are just using an "Appeal To Purity" argument/fallacy. What you are saying is that I can never attack feminism because there is an arbitrary (pure) idea of feminism somewhere. No matter how complling the evidence is against feminism it can't be criticized ever. I don't think I can get on board with an idea being ring fenced. I also don't like the way it is claimed that to be against feminism is to be against women's rights. If I used the same argument against women's rights that I am using against feminism I will fall flat on my face. Women's (all) rights movements are issue specific and goal oriented. I have always believed in equal rights for everyone.
It's holy writ that feminists are always right, no matter how ridiculous and asinine their proclamations.