What is a Strawman Argument in Debate?

  • Thread starter devil-fire
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In summary, "strawman" is a term used in arguments when someone intentionally misinterprets a point and argues against their own misinterpretation. It is a common tactic in political debates and often used to divert the discussion away from the original topic. It is important to recognize and avoid strawman arguments in order to have productive and logical discussions.
  • #1
devil-fire
every now and then I will see a debate going on in the forums here and someone will say "Your argument is a strawman, thus you lose and I stand corrected." or something to that effect and the the other guy will always say "Thats not a strawman! Your a strawman!"

calling someone's point a "strawman" must have some kind of meaning I'm not aware of because other then the topic getting slightly derailed, it keeps going. what are people referring to when they call things strawmen?
 
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  • #2
Im not sure, I think its something like arguing something someone did not say.
 
  • #3
Straw man. This is the fallacy of refuting a caricatured or extreme version of somebody's argument, rather than the actual argument they've made. Often this fallacy involves putting words into somebody's mouth by saying they've made arguments they haven't actually made, in which case the straw man argument is a veiled version of argumentum ad logicam. One example of a straw man argument would be to say, "Mr. Jones thinks that capitalism is good because everybody earns whatever wealth they have, but this is clearly false because many people just inherit their fortunes," when in fact Mr. Jones had not made the "earnings" argument and had instead argued, say, that capitalism gives most people an incentive to work and save. The fact that some arguments made for a policy are wrong does not imply that the policy itself is wrong.

That and other common logical fallacies and their explanations can be found here:
http://www.csun.edu/~dgw61315/fallacies.html#Straw man
 
  • #4
devil-fire said:
calling someone's point a "strawman" must have some kind of meaning I'm not aware of because other then the topic getting slightly derailed, it keeps going. what are people referring to when they call things strawmen?

It's when you intentionally misinterpret something, then argue against your own misinterpretation.

John: Crime is a problem, but I don't think longer jail terms will do anything to stop it.
Steve: You're right, jail is useless. Let's just turn all the criminals loose on the streets since prison clearly does nothing :rolleyes:

In the above example, John made a vaild argument, then Steve created a strawman. It's very common on forums that are filled with assh0les like Something Awful. When somebody brings up a strawman or a red herring, it's a good indication that their argument doesn't hold a lot of water. Watch political debates closely and you'll see this happen way too often.
 
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  • #5
ShawnD said:
It's when you intentionally misinterpret something, then argue against your own misinterpretation.

John: Crime is a problem, but I don't think longer jail terms will do anything to stop it.
Steve: You're right, jail is useless. Let's just turn all the criminals loose on the streets since prison clearly does nothing :rolleyes:

In the above example, John made a vaild argument, then Steve created a strawman. It's very common on forums that are filled with assh0les like Something Awful. When somebody brings up a strawman or a red herring, it's a good indication that their argument doesn't hold a lot of water. Watch political debates closely and you'll see this happen way too often.

So perhaps we should get rid of political debates? :rolleyes: I think you could give better examples than that Shawn.
 
  • #6
That's a pretty clear example, cyrus. The point of a strawman is that it is putting words in a person's mouth they didn't say and then arguing against them (in this case, via sarcasm). In the example, John does not say jail is useless and didn't apply they should be gotten rid of.

Incidentally, it is tough to tell if your first sentence was meant to be ironic, but it is also a good example of a strawman! Shawn is right, in any case, that the strawman is an extremely common political debate tactic. However, it can sometimes be tough to tell the difference between a strawman and a logical extension. Ie, if you do A, B will happen, so you argue against B. The person who argued A did not argue B, but it is an acceptable debate tactic to argue against B if it is a logical consequence of A.
 
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  • #7
cyrusabdollahi said:
So perhaps we should get rid of political debates? :rolleyes: I think you could give better examples than that Shawn.

Or just educate people to watch out for strawman arguments.
I thought my example was self explanatory but I can try it again.

Republican: We need to go to war with Iraq to send a message to terrorists
Democrat: What will a war in Iraq accomplish? (valid question)
Republican: Are you suggesting we do nothing to discourage terrorism? (strawman)

The democrat's question was specifically relating to a war with Iraq, asking what the connection is between Iraq and Terrorism.
The republican then replaces "Iraq" with "terrorism" to imply that the two are interchangable, without actually giving any evidence of this, then acts like the democrat knows this and willingly does nothing to stop terrorism/Iraq.

Another example? Sure. I'll even pick on democrats this time.

Democrat: Guns kill 200 children per year in this country
Republican: On the broad scale of things that's only like 1%, so your point is moot.
Democrat: Are you saying children are not important?

The question started off as dealing with statistics alone. The democrat threw out a number and the republican jumped on it. Since the statistics argument failed, the democrat makes a strawman argument based on emotionalism, implying that republicans don't care about 200 kids dying per year.


A straw man in an argument is just like a target dummy. Make a decoy, such as emotionalism towards children, and have your opponent fight against emotionalism while you try to make a point about statistics. The two sides are no longer arguing about the same issue, and it puts somebody on the defensive about an issue that has nothing to do with the topic at hand.

Person 1: This teacher was caught having sex with his students, he should be thrown in jail
Person 2: That student was 17 which makes it perfectly legal. Why would he be thrown in jail?
Person 1: You're advocating sex with children?
 
  • #8
Dammit, my sarcasm just bombed. I shall leave the jokes to the professionals.

I made a strawman to his strawman explanation. -o, well.
 
  • #9
A strawman is an argument with no brains.
 
  • #10
russ_watters said:
However, it can sometimes be tough to tell the difference between a strawman and a logical extension. Ie, if you do A, B will happen, so you argue against B. The person who argued A did not argue B, but it is an acceptable debate tactic to argue against B if it is a logical consequence of A.

I think what you're talking about is called a null hypothesis. Rather than proving your own point to be true, you prove the counterpoint to be false.
Take an issue like minimum wage. You can't positively argue that raising minimum wage is a good idea because the entire concept is theoretical, and any gains happening after raising minimum wage could just be a coincidence. Given that you can't argue minimum wage to be good, you can argue a lack of minimum wage to be bad, and prove this point with examples of sweatshops and horrible conditions in early 1900s America.

I guess the best way to tell the difference is look for evidence to support an argument. A null hypothesis actually does have supporting evidence. A straw man is entirely baseless.
 
  • #11
It's actually a straw man argument or politically known as a straw person's argument. It's simply oversimplifying your opponent's argument to make it easier for you to attack it.
 
  • #12
LOL straw*person*.

I gues the postman is now a post*person*. The mailman is a mail *person*.

fireman is a fire*person*. Policeman is a police *person*.

PC is BS.
 
  • #13
This discussion has been extremely enlightening, I must say. I seem to be particularly vulnerable to these kinds of arguments & obvious (in hindsight) strawmen have unseated me on many occasions. I end up reacting & end up becoming 'troll-fodder'.

I wonder if there are any useful books outlining logic & debating skills?
 
  • #14
ShawnD said:
I think what you're talking about is called a null hypothesis. Rather than proving your own point to be true, you prove the counterpoint to be false...

I guess the best way to tell the difference is look for evidence to support an argument. A null hypothesis actually does have supporting evidence. A straw man is entirely baseless.
No, I don't think so. Any counterpoint argument can be valid. What makes a strawman an invalid is that the point wasn't argued to begin with. For example, if someone did argue that prisons should be abolished, then arguing against that with valid evidence would be fine. The reason it isn't fine, even with valid evidence, is that the argument about prisons being abolished wasn't made in the first place (from your first example).
 
  • #15
cyrusabdollahi said:
Dammit, my sarcasm just bombed. I shall leave the jokes to the professionals.

.

:rofl:
Nope, I got it that you were sarcastic here! But I have to admit that it was russ and shawn's replies to your post that made me laugh since they'd thought you were serious!:tongue:
 
  • #16
momentum_waves said:
I seem to be particularly vulnerable to these kinds of arguments & obvious (in hindsight) strawmen have unseated me on many occasions.

If you're heavy into debating, be sure to check out Wiki's section on fallacies
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fallacies

Another one that kills people is the use of weasel words. Something like "it has been suggested that Saddam has ties to Bin Laden". Suggested by who? When? Based on what? Immediately jump on statements like that and demand supporting evidence. If the person you're debating doesn't have any, their credibility is forever lost.
 
  • #17
Moonbear said:
That and other common logical fallacies and their explanations can be found here:
http://www.csun.edu/~dgw61315/fallacies.html#Straw man

That's a great link, Moonbear.

The Wiki list is good too, but it goes on ad nauseum

Get it?

(I used a "strawman" fallacy by incorrectly calling a list of fallacies fallacious due to repetition, though it was not repetitious, only exhaustively complete; now that's humor!)
 
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  • #18
A rose by any other name would smell as sweet

cyrusabdollahi said:
LOL straw*person*.

I gues the postman is now a post*person*. The mailman is a mail *person*.

fireman is a fire*person*. Policeman is a police *person*.

PC is BS.

I think people concentrate too much on the name of something and too little on what it is.

Richard Feynperson would probably agree.
You can know the name of a bird in all the languages of the world, but when you're finished, you'll know absolutely nothing whatever about the bird... So let's look at the bird and see what it's doing -- that's what counts. I learned very early the difference between knowing the name of something and knowing something.
 
  • #19
Great quote, Bob. I really should read some of that guy's stuff.
 
  • #20
cyrusabdollahi said:
Dammit, my sarcasm just bombed. I shall leave the jokes to the professionals.

I made a strawman to his strawman explanation. -o, well.

If it's any consolation, you almost got me too, but I caught the intent just in the nick of time, so you got a chuckle out of me. I didn't comment on it last night when I saw it, because I wanted to see how many people fell for it. :biggrin: I think your example shows why an appropriately subtle strawman can work so effectively.
 
  • #21
cyrusabdollahi said:
LOL straw*person*.
:rofl: I found that funny too.

I gues the postman is now a post*person*. The mailman is a mail *person*.

fireman is a fire*person*. Policeman is a police *person*.

PC is BS.

Um, in case anyone really cares, they are now postal carriers or mail carriers, firefighters, and police officers. I think those terms make more sense anyway...it's someone's job to carry the mail to you, it's not a person made out of mail.
 
  • #22
cyrusabdollahi said:
LOL straw*person*.

I gues the postman is now a post*person*. The mailman is a mail *person*.

fireman is a fire*person*. Policeman is a police *person*.

PC is BS.

Are you making fun of me? It's not my science, it's for real. Straw person is the politically correct version of a straw man argument, but straw man is more commonly know.
If you still don't believe me you can google both.
 

Q1: What is a strawman argument in debate?

A strawman argument is a type of fallacy in which one person misrepresents or exaggerates their opponent's viewpoint in order to make it easier to attack. This tactic is used to avoid addressing the actual argument and instead attack a weaker or distorted version of it.

Q2: How is a strawman argument different from other fallacies?

A strawman argument is different from other fallacies because it involves intentionally misrepresenting the opponent's argument, whereas other fallacies typically involve errors in reasoning or logic. Strawman arguments are also often used as a distraction or diversion from the main argument.

Q3: What are some examples of a strawman argument?

Some examples of a strawman argument include: exaggerating or misrepresenting an opponent's viewpoint, focusing on a minor or unimportant aspect of the argument, or presenting a false dichotomy (i.e. making it seem like there are only two extreme options, when in reality there are more nuanced positions).

Q4: How can one avoid using a strawman argument in a debate?

To avoid using a strawman argument in a debate, it is important to listen carefully to the opposing viewpoint and accurately represent their argument. It is also helpful to ask for clarification or ask questions to better understand their position. Additionally, stick to addressing the actual argument being made, rather than attacking a distorted version of it.

Q5: How can identifying a strawman argument strengthen one's own argument?

By identifying a strawman argument, one can strengthen their own argument by refocusing the debate on the actual topic and addressing the core issues. This can also help to avoid getting sidetracked or caught up in irrelevant details. Additionally, by accurately representing the opponent's argument, one can show that their own argument is stronger and more reasonable.

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