Jamshyd
Bluelight Crew
I've always turned this notion in my mind. It just doesn't stick for me as a hard-and-fast rule. It seems to be pretty arbitrary. In fact, I started this thread precisely to discuss the arbitrariness of this rule: today, a good friend of mine on BL reminded me to attack the post, not the poster. Apparently we've been discussing the issue for years, yet I don't know what we concluded. So let's open the discussion for philosophical questioning.
So back to the above example of applying this rule: it definitely makes a lot of sense for forum etiquette. Criticize what a person wrote, rather than who a person is. The way I see it, The rule is perfectly applicable here, without question.
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However, let's take the idea (or concept, rather) of "Masculinity" for a second example.
If I were to tackle the idea, I'd say something like: "The hallmark of masculinity is a sense of constant insecurity." I tackled the idea; I did not attack a single men.
And yet, I find it hard to believe that most (if not all) men, and even many women, would find this offensive to varying degrees. It appears that the "idea" of masculinity can only be attacked when all parties in discussion have, through initial mutual agreement, completely dissociated themselves from the concept of Masculinity, knowingly. That is the only way I could see it working.
Otherwise, when one criticizes masculinity without prior mutual-agreement, one criticizes all men, without even the need to mention any of them by name. In this case (ie. in public discussion), attacking either idea or person seems to have very similar results, leading one to wonder what the point is of applying the rule in question.
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Let's do a third example: If I were to say (just for example), that "Christianity is inherently violent and encourages bloodshed." Note that I attacked the idea - I said "christianity", not "christians". As saying this implies that, by virtue of simply being a Christian, one is prone to violence and bloodshed. Does this make it any less of a fallacy? What's worse, such sayings help legitimize what violence a few christians may indeed have - both in their eyes and the eyes of the outsiders, both of whom find this allegation believable and thus propagate it either explicitly or implicitly.
I would say that in such a case, attacking the idea is even more harmful than attacking a person!
Now that I think of it, this actually applies to the masculinity example as well.
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With all that said, it is my opinion that this rule cannot be applied to all vehicles of argument.
While it is definitely respectful to attack what a person wrote than what a person is; it definitely isn't the same case for attacking what a person identifies with (essentially part of what the person is) and claiming to have made a polite distinction. It simply doesn't work, because the dichotomy is fallacious - the identity-idea is an integral part of the person's being, and attacking one necessarily means attacking the other.
Is this rule - which is quite popular I find even outside of BL and fora in general - more than less a way for people to weasel out of political-correctness norms while trying to attack a group?
Or is there some universal validity here that I am just not getting? I'd be honestly open to changing my opinion if I find enough convincing replies...
So back to the above example of applying this rule: it definitely makes a lot of sense for forum etiquette. Criticize what a person wrote, rather than who a person is. The way I see it, The rule is perfectly applicable here, without question.
----
However, let's take the idea (or concept, rather) of "Masculinity" for a second example.
If I were to tackle the idea, I'd say something like: "The hallmark of masculinity is a sense of constant insecurity." I tackled the idea; I did not attack a single men.
And yet, I find it hard to believe that most (if not all) men, and even many women, would find this offensive to varying degrees. It appears that the "idea" of masculinity can only be attacked when all parties in discussion have, through initial mutual agreement, completely dissociated themselves from the concept of Masculinity, knowingly. That is the only way I could see it working.
Otherwise, when one criticizes masculinity without prior mutual-agreement, one criticizes all men, without even the need to mention any of them by name. In this case (ie. in public discussion), attacking either idea or person seems to have very similar results, leading one to wonder what the point is of applying the rule in question.
----
Let's do a third example: If I were to say (just for example), that "Christianity is inherently violent and encourages bloodshed." Note that I attacked the idea - I said "christianity", not "christians". As saying this implies that, by virtue of simply being a Christian, one is prone to violence and bloodshed. Does this make it any less of a fallacy? What's worse, such sayings help legitimize what violence a few christians may indeed have - both in their eyes and the eyes of the outsiders, both of whom find this allegation believable and thus propagate it either explicitly or implicitly.
I would say that in such a case, attacking the idea is even more harmful than attacking a person!
Now that I think of it, this actually applies to the masculinity example as well.
---
With all that said, it is my opinion that this rule cannot be applied to all vehicles of argument.
While it is definitely respectful to attack what a person wrote than what a person is; it definitely isn't the same case for attacking what a person identifies with (essentially part of what the person is) and claiming to have made a polite distinction. It simply doesn't work, because the dichotomy is fallacious - the identity-idea is an integral part of the person's being, and attacking one necessarily means attacking the other.
Is this rule - which is quite popular I find even outside of BL and fora in general - more than less a way for people to weasel out of political-correctness norms while trying to attack a group?
Or is there some universal validity here that I am just not getting? I'd be honestly open to changing my opinion if I find enough convincing replies...