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#51
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On May 12, 5:11*pm, More_Flaps wrote:
On May 13, 9:51*am, Mxsmanic wrote: More_Flaps writes: I think you are MXing up an ad hominem with simple personal attack. Same thing. Nope. Not to nit-pick, but: "Ad hominem has also recently acquired a use as a noun denoting personal attacks, as in "Notwithstanding all the ad hominem, Gingrich insists that he and Panetta can work together" (Washington Post)" Reference: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ad%20hominem -Le Chaud Lapin- |
#52
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On May 12, 8:19*am, Larry Dighera wrote:
The argumentative personal attacks of which you speak are known as 'flames':http://www.eps.mcgill.ca/jargon/jargon.html#flame They've been a phenomenon since the '60s. *I doubt that flames are unique to airmen. Are you an English Teacher ![]() this list, and its not just because of the flames. * Is the "car racing group" you mentioned a Usenet newsgroup? Yup, its just like this one (Without the flames of course). |
#53
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F. Baum wrote:
On May 11, 7:29 pm, Shirl wrote: The thing I dont get about this list is how everything turns argumentitive after about a dozen posts on a thread. I dont get Totally disagree with that one FB. You are way off base here. Let me start by saying that not _everything_ turns arg after about a dozen posts -- if only there was one that did not. |
#54
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On Mon, 12 May 2008 12:14:45 -0700 (PDT), "F. Baum"
wrote: Partially agree here. At work I see the types who have to make sure evryone at a party knows they are a pilot. They drive around town running errands 3 hours before sign in IN their uniforms FWIW, I know firefighters, mail carriers, a UPS driver, a FedEx driver and a riverboat pilot that do the same. In fact I know firefighters that wear something related to firefighting, like a "DC Collapse Unit" t-shirt, EVERY day. |
#55
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tman inv@lid wrote in :
F. Baum wrote: On May 11, 7:29 pm, Shirl wrote: The thing I dont get about this list is how everything turns argumentitive after about a dozen posts on a thread. I dont get Totally disagree with that one FB. You are way off base here. Let me start by saying that not _everything_ turns arg after about a dozen posts -- if only there was one that did not. You're just trying to start an argument now. Bertie |
#56
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Larry Dighera wrote in
: On Mon, 12 May 2008 05:53:30 -0700 (PDT), "F. Baum" wrote in : I think some of this just has to do with aviation. I think it is the type of personaliy that is attracted to flying. The argumentative personal attacks of which you speak are known as 'flames': http://www.eps.mcgill.ca/jargon/jargon.html#flame They've been a phenomenon since the '60s. I doubt that flames are unique to airmen. Is the "car racing group" you mentioned a Usenet newsgroup? Why, trying to figure out if it comes under your jurisdction? Bertie |
#57
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B A R R Y wrote in
: On Mon, 12 May 2008 12:14:45 -0700 (PDT), "F. Baum" wrote: Partially agree here. At work I see the types who have to make sure evryone at a party knows they are a pilot. They drive around town running errands 3 hours before sign in IN their uniforms FWIW, I know firefighters, mail carriers, a UPS driver, a FedEx driver and a riverboat pilot that do the same. True. Some would be just too lazy to change, of course! In fact I know firefighters that wear something related to firefighting, like a "DC Collapse Unit" t-shirt, EVERY day. That's a bit creepy, alright. If you've ever had the opportunity to have to be consoled for some really major trauma, the feeling that comes from having someone show you some genuine sympathy is intense, to say the least. It's a physical reaction, obviously designed to encourage the person to seek out the assistance of the tribe in hard times and it feels as good as an orgasm, or what I might imagine a shot of an opiate might feel like. I'm sure lots here have felt it. It's not hard to see how it might become addictive, in fact. I've got a notion that it's probably the reason that people with Munchausen and it's related ailments do what they do. Bertie |
#58
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On May 13, 10:37*am, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On May 12, 5:11*pm, More_Flaps wrote: On May 13, 9:51*am, Mxsmanic wrote: More_Flaps writes: I think you are MXing up an ad hominem with simple personal attack. Same thing. Nope. Not to nit-pick, but: "Ad hominem has also recently acquired a use as a noun denoting personal attacks, as in "Notwithstanding all the ad hominem, Gingrich insists that he and Panetta can work together" (Washington Post)" Reference:http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ad%20hominem Nope, still not the same -as supported by the reference you gave. Ad hominem is an abbreviation for Argumentum ad hominem and is the antithesis of argumentum ad verecundium. That, my little bunny, is the difference. Cheers |
#59
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On May 13, 10:37*am, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On May 12, 5:11*pm, More_Flaps wrote: On May 13, 9:51*am, Mxsmanic wrote: More_Flaps writes: I think you are MXing up an ad hominem with simple personal attack. Same thing. Nope. Not to nit-pick, but: "Ad hominem has also recently acquired a use as a noun denoting personal attacks, as in "Notwithstanding all the ad hominem, Gingrich insists that he and Panetta can work together" (Washington Post)" Here you go, a better definition than the washington pist: "Ad hominem arguments are always invalid in syllogistic logic, since the truth value of premises is taken as given, and the validity of a logical inference is independent of the person making the inference. However, ad hominem arguments are rarely presented as formal syllogisms, and their assessment lies in the domain of informal logic and the theory of evidence.[1] The theory of evidence depends to a large degree on assessments of the credibility of witnesses, including eyewitness evidence and expert witness evidence. Evidence that a purported eyewitness is unreliable, or has a motive for lying, or that a purported expert witness lacks the claimed expertise can play a major role in making judgements from evidence. Argumentum ad hominem is the inverse of argumentum ad verecundiam, in which the arguer bases the truth value of an assertion on the authority, knowledge or position of the person asserting it. Hence, while an ad hominem argument may make an assertion less compelling, by showing that the person making the assertion does not have the authority, knowledge or position they claim, or has made mistaken assertions on similar topics in the past, it cannot provide an infallible counterargument." Cheers |
#60
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More_Flaps wrote in
: On May 13, 10:37*am, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: On May 12, 5:11*pm, More_Flaps wrote: On May 13, 9:51*am, Mxsmanic wrote: More_Flaps writes: I think you are MXing up an ad hominem with simple personal attack. Same thing. Nope. Not to nit-pick, but: "Ad hominem has also recently acquired a use as a noun denoting personal attacks, as in "Notwithstanding all the ad hominem, Gingrich insists that he and Panetta can work together" (Washington Post)" Here you go, a better definition than the washington pist: "Ad hominem arguments are always invalid in syllogistic logic, since the truth value of premises is taken as given, and the validity of a logical inference is independent of the person making the inference. However, ad hominem arguments are rarely presented as formal syllogisms, and their assessment lies in the domain of informal logic and the theory of evidence.[1] The theory of evidence depends to a large degree on assessments of the credibility of witnesses, including eyewitness evidence and expert witness evidence. Evidence that a purported eyewitness is unreliable, or has a motive for lying, or that a purported expert witness lacks the claimed expertise can play a major role in making judgements from evidence. Argumentum ad hominem is the inverse of argumentum ad verecundiam, in which the arguer bases the truth value of an assertion on the authority, knowledge or position of the person asserting it. Hence, while an ad hominem argument may make an assertion less compelling, by showing that the person making the assertion does not have the authority, knowledge or position they claim, or has made mistaken assertions on similar topics in the past, it cannot provide an infallible counterargument." Cheers The guy who wrote that is an asshole. Bertie |
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