Well, if you're suggesting I did not make a coherent counter-argument, I think you're wrong. The only way to get to that is to take an argument that I made, and explain why it lacks coherence. In what way? Was it internally inconsistent? Did the logic not follow? Are the premises false? Something else?
And, I do not think I failed to recognize the point. That being said, when I think someone has missed a point I tried to make, I don't bitch at them and merely sling insults or criticize their posting style - I say "hey, I think you missed my point - here's the point I think you missed: [try to highlight it, or restate it clearly, or in a different way]. I.e. - state for me one point made that you think I missed.
Well, I addressed the separate points to clearly isolate the point I'm addressing. If someone is making an argument and there is a statement made on which the argument is based which is incorrect, I clear way to show that is to address it via a quote and response.Joe wrote: ↑Thu Sep 20, 2018 12:01 amNo, it's known as fisking, and it's usually more annoying than effective. After a few exchanges, the conversation becomes difficult to follow, a tangle of quotes. Of course, your response still could be a gish gallop, but fisking is far worse than any gish gallop.
You can post how you want. I think when multiple points are made, it's better to address them point by point. I don't agree with leaving it all in a long narrative, because then some points that can be refuted get lost in the murk of a longer narrative. Some people intend that to be the case - bury a weak point, so that it isn't refuted.
This isn't a newspaper, it's a forum, and fisking is not considered rude per se. Now, if fisking is done with flaming or handwaving, then it's considered poor form, yes, but that's not what I do. What I do is carefully address the actual point made in a rational and logical way. That's not in the least considered rude. It's very common discussion forum practice. I learned it from others way back in the Dawkins (old) forum days, and I've seen it used commonly here by others (without the lectures you're giving me here), on Rational Skepticism, and several other forums.Joe wrote: ↑Thu Sep 20, 2018 12:01 am
Aside from being widely considered rude, it's lousy writing. The Chicago Manual of Style condemns fisking as "a verbal format more suited to the large primate house than a newspaper," and both Gore Vidal and George Saunders have penned satirical essays lampooning it.
Now you've gone plaid. Look - fisking is called fisking because 15 years ago (give or take) Robert Fisk used to be deservedly "fisked" by people all the time -- i.e., have his articles or blog posts dismantled point by point.Joe wrote: ↑Thu Sep 20, 2018 12:01 am
Heck, even Robert Fisk, who helped popularize fisking and gave it his name, regrets his involvement in "lowering civil discourse to the level of haphazard noise." But there's a darker side to fisking. It's been implicated in cognitive decline, and correlates strongly with borderline personality disorder, according to a series of studies conducted by the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. An early form of the technique was an integral part of Nazi propaganda, and the Defense Intelligence Agency listed it as one of the characteristics by which to identify Russian Facebook trolls. Given it's cognitive impact, they suspect the intent is to diminish Facebook users critical thinking skills. Deputy Director Melissa Drisko said, "Russian use of subliminally damaging patterns of online discourse...may be the black swan of cyber warfare tactics." To top it all off, researchers at the Bonn University Institute of Psychology have found troubling signs that writers who fisk can develop nystagmus, a neurological disorder leading to uncontrolled eye movement and reduced vision. Really Forty Two, maybe you shouldn't be so enthusiastic in slicing the salami.
Regarding your allegations that people who address arguments on forum message boards through point by point quoting and responding are suffering from some sort of psychological disorder, or risking coming down with neurological disorders, or are Nazis or Russians -- I think I'll just leave that there for everyone's reading pleasure. A more absurd set of claims (obviously copied or lifted from somewhere, but not cited) is hard to imagine. Good show, boy, good show!
Remember that, folks - if you address another person's post point by point, carefully attempting to address or refute them, you are borderline personality, suffering from a neurological disorder, or using Nazi and Russian troll tactics.
A gish gallop is an argument technique generally defined as the use of a series of arguments or points made in one go, designed to overwhelm the opposition.
If I am taking someone else's post, and quoting it point by point, and responding point by point, I'm not engaging in the gish gallop. That's not to say the other person must be - but if anyone is, the original poster who made a series of points would be the gish galloper. Responding to a gish gallop point by point is not itself a gish gallop, and neither is responding to a series of points made.
It also supports the quote/response/quote/response style, and this forum has been around a while. I did not invent that manner of response. And, frankly, your opinion on how I should post is noted. Your view of it quite nice, and I appreciate your kind suggestions. I'll also be contemplating seeing a psychiatrist to get on my psychotropic meds, as well as making sure I'm checked for neurological disorders. Can't be too careful.
Fair question. "Addressing each point by slicing the salami..." was the "it." In case you missed the point, the point was that addressing each ponit by slicing the salami was not a gish gallop. Addressing each point by slicing the salami is meeting each argument or factual claim head on. I'm glad I could clarify that for you.
