From: Paul Filseth [pgxf@lsil.com] Sent: Tuesday, February 12, 2002 11:24 AM To: brian@holtz.org Subject: Re: disingenuous This is a retransmission of my Jan. 21 email. > If you have constructive advice for how I can be a better debater, I'd > be eager for you to tell me precisely what these practices are, give > examples of them, and explain to me why they are annoying. 1. You call people's sincerity into question without good cause. > I'm not asking this just to be difficult. I have a hard time believing that. :-) Still, I'll indulge you for at least a little while If you can't figure out why that's annoying, I probably can't help you. 2. You argue from authority. Your entire line of argument against John, Jeff, Ken and me based on your belief that the pros mostly agree with you is annoying. If you're wrong, and they don't agree with you, how are we supposed to prove it? Spend months gathering statistics? If you're right that they agree with you, but they're wrong, how are we supposed to prove it? Refute dozens of articles one at a time and leave you to claim there are hundreds more unrefuted? If we're all wrong, how are we supposed to figure out why? Read hundreds of articles that take for granted that we're wrong and never explain it? People participate on newsgroups because they want to get others to take their arguments seriously and give them a fair hearing. If an argument is sound they want others to be convinced, and if it's unsound they want to know what's wrong with it. Telling us we're wrong because someone you call an expert thinks we're wrong for no reason we can learn leaves us helpless, swinging our intellectual fists against empty air. The fact that you tell us what's wrong with our arguments in no way helps. We have no reason to think the pros are persuaded by your argument, rather than by some completely different and possibly much better argument. Your arguments have been deeply unconvincing, and that tells us that if you're right about what the pros think, then either there must be a good reason out there that we're barred from knowing by the effective conspiracy of silence on the subject that you imply exists, or else they have no good reason, they're persuaded by bad arguments, but our arguments aren't going to be taken seriously because you think it's enough that pros who haven't even heard our arguments aren't convinced by them. You're putting us in a Kafka-esque position. Of course it's annoying. John told you he's not impressed by argument from authority and will not debate the thoughts of unnamed "philosophers". That's my position also. All we're asking for is an opponent we can fight, and drub or be drubbed by. If you don't feel you can do it on your own and need professional help, we'd accept that if you'd point us to a pro we can fight, and drub or be drubbed by. But if you won't even do that much, I for one won't agree to treat my failure to land blows on empty air as a defeat. What it is is a reason to stop talking to you. 3. You make invalid inferences about what people mean by what they say and challenge them to defend claims they never made. See below. > > Is that just an offer to me, or will you offer everyone you > > disagree with the same courtesy? > > As I assumed was clear from my previous sentence (which you deleted), > it applies primarily to you If you aren't willing to refrain from impugning the truthfulness of _everyone_ you don't have solid evidence against, it means you don't understand why it's a bad idea to do that, and only offered to in my case to get me to shut up. If you don't understand why it's a bad idea, you don't know how to engage in friendly debate yet. > because you "had (at least until recently ;-) the best track record > of reasoning here on a.a.m.". > That is, people with lesser track records were already getting my > presumption of faulty reasoning. Except Ken, apparently. Moreover, if you weren't assuming faulty reasoning in general in my case, then since we'd already been arguing incessantly for months, that would seem to imply that you thought either that I must be right (so you were just arguing half-heartedly to get me to lay it all out for you so you'd understand why I was right), or else that my statements really were wrong and yet my reasoning wasn't faulty (so I must really know they were wrong and you were right and must therefore be being disingenuous). Yet you claim you never believed I was disingenuous. I don't believe for a second that you thought I was right -- your arguments were too passionate. So it follows that I must in fact have been getting your presumption of faulty reasoning all along, even if you didn't consciously think of it that way. And that's the point. Friendly debate _requires_ the presumption of faulty reasoning (or ignorance of significant empirical facts) in the other party. Because that presumption is a necessity for civil discussion, to withdraw it from anyone is a hostile act. > > So you'll probably go right on thinking I'm > > disingenuous even if you don't say it > > Again: I never said or believed you were disingenuous. I said > that a particular statement of yours "seemed disingenuous", and > so I was trying to explore the meaning and implications of it. > Those efforts were (and remain) stymied by your indignation > filibuster. To raise the issue of the other person's sincerity is to imply that he does not deserve the benefit of the customary presumption of honest error. The moment you decided to explore the subject of my truthfulness instead of the validity of my argument, we were no longer in a friendly debate. I have zero reason to assist a non-friend in his efforts to explore whatever he feels like exploring. You took what had been a discussion and changed it into a prosecution. You made us enemies. Enemies stymie each other. I elected to stymie your prosecution of me by refusing to play out my role in your script. My option. My goal here is to make sure you never sandbag me again, and I don't see how getting you to understand why "Life" is a good example for refuting anthropic arguments would help achieve that -- it doesn't have anything to do with why questioning your debating partner's sincerity is unfriendly. > Are you refusing to believe my self-report here? No. What you self-reported was "I will from now on first question your reasoning skills before questioning your motives. :-)" That's a statement of what you intend to _say_. You didn't self-report what you were going to _think_. > How would such refusal be any different than an accusation of > disingenuousness? Had your self-report been about what you would think, if someone had refused to believe that, it would have been very different from an accusation of disingenuousness. First, because your statement was about the future. You do not necessarily know what you will think in the future. So such refusal would be an accusation of lack of self-knowledge, not disingenuousness. And, second, because he could not raise the issue of your sincerity. You'd already done that to yourself, by putting a smiley on your self-report. > Is habitual (but uninentional?) carelessness and illogic toward > others' words perhaps one of the practices that allegedly makes me > annoying? Please provide details and examples if you have the > time and interest in improving my debating skills. If not, > then please refrain from such snide generalizations. If you didn't want to be disparaged, you shouldn't have opened hostilities. But here are a few: > The debate over whether "supernatural" is well-definable. I can > settle that quite easily by saying, "Yes, it's well-definable when I > define it to mean 'imaginary.'" That of course is not what I meant, and you know it. > However, that kind of definition seemed to be not the kind that you > wanted to debate or to talk about. Duh. :-) I'm interested in a definition that makes sense of the philosophical debate over naturalism. I'm not interested in a definition designed for use in a vain sophomoric attempt to define the supernatural out of existence. > the very people who seem to get the most mileage out of > understanding (or pretending to understand, or mistakenly claiming > that they understand) the term. Is Michael Levine, author of the above Stanford Encyclopedia article, someone who "pretends" or "mistakenly claims" to understand the term? > These are acceptable as dictionary definitions to help people understand > the ordinary usage of words. As tight definitions suitable for > philosophic debate they are useless. If you have evidence that philosophers use the term to mean anything other than its ordinary dictionary definition, then please present it. > in a world without rocket scientists, we could write "rockets can't > be built" in our textbooks. When rocket scientists appear, we could > then add a footnote saying "except by rocket scientists". Please tell us the ISBN of the physics textbook that says building rockets is a violation of what is otherwise a physical law and can only be accomplished by the will of rocket scientists. > when I asked you about it (in a more careful way that apparantly still > didn't live up to your standards of civility), It apparently did live up to yours. And that's the problem. There is no civil way to raise the subject of the other person's deservingness of the presumption of good faith. All more careful phrasing does is make it that much more obvious that you're fully aware of what you're saying. > If you want your statements never to be misunderstood, you > might consider answering questions about them. You don't need to understand it to avoid putting words in my mouth. All you need to do is leave out the words "perfect" and "considered" when you call something "the Filseth Standard", on the grounds that they're your words and not mine. If you offend someone to the point that he doesn't want to talk to you, that doesn't license you to assume any answer you like to any question he hasn't answered. You don't have a right to have your questions answered. > And before complaining about my civility in the future, please > ruminate on a sampling of your own uncivil remarks that I've let > slide: You don't need to draw my attention to the fact that I've been uncivil to you. I did it deliberately, because you forfeited your right to expect civility from me. We are in an unfriendly debate by your choice, and that's how such debates go. My statements about your lack of civility are simply responses to your questions to me and your continued erroneous implications about me, which I choose not to leave hanging, and explanations for why I'm not resuming the debate on the philosophical questions you want to talk about. They aren't complaints -- I complain when I expect the person I complain to to try to correct the situation. All I expect from you is endless insistence that your initial attack was justified, each time thereby implying again that I did something to deserve it. I will not do anything to help you leave that impression. Resuming the original debate while that implication against me is still hanging would imply that I accept you as a civil debate partner. That would imply that I think you were being reasonable in attacking me, which would imply in turn that I agree I did something to deserve the attack. I didn't. We were, however, still in a friendly debate when I wrote: [..] how "exist" works in your idiolect [..] I take it you don't know what "idiolect" means. It isn't unfriendly. It's the same as you calling John's definition of supernatural "idiosyncratic". > > > I've never seen > > > such a journal article, never seen a citation of such, and > > > instead have seen many journal articles that would presumably be > > > required by editors and peer reviewers to deal with such a > > > demonstration if it existed. > > > > [this] doesn't actually have any bearing on the merit of > > your definitions > > It bears on the merit of *any* definition, since your position > appears to be that the notion of God or supernaturality is > oxymoronical or meaningless. Articles that treat these notions > as non-oxymoronical and meaningful stand in prima facie opposition > to your position. No they don't. What you call my position exists only in your imagination. My position is that _your_ definition (specifically, the one you were pushing when that discussion fell apart) and those I've seen in dictionaries are meaningless and/or false to common usage. I have myself stipulated a meaning for supernatural: "goes in the same category with Santa and Harry Potter". Attempts I've seen to flesh out that kind of a description with an objective criterion have failed. This doesn't mean the concept is meaningless; it may only mean that people stink at figuring out what they mean. If philosophers talk the same way as ordinary folks and don't talk about what they mean by it, that is not evidence that any particular definition is any good; nor is it evidence in favor of the existence of an objective criterion. Such a criterion may or may not exist but a tacit assumption that it exists is not evidence for it. > > > it wouldn't motivate me to rehearse for you how the issue came > > > to be a matter of settled scholarship. > > > > It sounds like you didn't bother to tell him Bible scholars' > > _reasons_ for believing there was a Q source. Typical. > > It sounds that way because that's precisely what I said. :-) That's not precisely what you said. > If somebody disputes the moon landings or the Q source theory > or any other matter of settled scholarship, it will indeed > be "typical" of me to not invest my time educating that person. > The fact that I thusly value my time in no way increases the > credibility or validity of the case opposed to the settled > scholarly consensus. You can of course use your time as you see fit; but if you take that attitude he will have no reason to consider himself refuted. It would be perfectly sensible under such conditions for him to find someone else to talk to, who's interested in discussion rather than in preaching to a choir of one. It would not be reasonable for him to back off and say to himself, "I must be wrong and I shouldn't mind that no one will tell me why, because I ought to have faith in whoever I'm told is an expert." > > All that matters is whether you can expose flaws in our arguments > > against your definition. > > That is indeed what mostly matters, and I have indeed > rebutted all such arguments. True, but "rebutted" does not equal "exposed flaws". > But I for one would be worried if the consensus of mainstream > scholarship appeared to assume that my position is obviously wrong. Suit yourself. As for me, I won't worry, if all attempts to find out if they have a good reason to think I'm wrong are met with stonewalling. > > What you're arguing, in effect, is that looking isn't the appropriate > > way to test that theory > > Your analogy obviously does not capture our situation. > Suppose people (viz., professional philosophers) act > in a way that appears to assume that supernaturality is well-defined > enough in its ordinary dictionary definition to argue whether it > exists. What I'm arguing is that other people who disagree with > that assumption should find discomfort NOT ONLY in my demonstrations > that it is well-defined BUT ALSO in the apparent existence of the > assumption among so many people trained and incentivized to > detect and expose such allegedly false assumptions. But the worthlessness of the ordinary dictionary definitions is blatant and self-evident, just like what an acrostic in the Bible says. All one has to do is look and apply logic and experience with real humans really using the words. > > The problem is that you do not appear > > to understand the difference between friendly debate and > > unfriendly debate. > > Can you name anyone else who thinks I've been unfriendly or > uncivil to you or to anyone else on a.a.m.? I haven't polled them. Feel free, if onlookers' opinions matter to you. I'm not much into appeals to the gallery. > > You crossed from one to the other without good reason > > I've given my reasons, and you've admitted that you > haven't rebutted them. That is false. I did rebut them, and when you falsely claimed I hadn't, I rebutted that. You seem to have trouble grasping the fact that "X." and "I called your sincerity into question because of X." are not logically equivalent statements. - Paul