Is this a faithful recreation of the version of Graham’s Hierarchy of Disagreement with 2 additional bottom levels?

  • Pup Biru@aussie.zone
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    3 days ago

    i’m not sure that it could exist at most other levels… perhaps tone and name calling, but im not sure that the contradiction level is a fallacy: there’s no active intent there (not that active intent is required; i’m just not sure of the words right now)

    like you’re stating the opposite case but that’s not intending to mislead exactly, and simply doing so isn’t harmful to the dialogue - it’s just not super helpful

    i think it’s an action rather than a tactic, if that makes sense?

    • Digit@lemmy.wtfOP
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      15 hours ago

      Took a while to contemplate how mere contradiction could be fallacious. It could be:

      • semantic strawman.
      • bare assertion fallacy.
      • argument from ignorance fallacy.
      • false dilemma.
      • appeal to emotion.
      • moving goal posts.
      • circular reasoning.
      • non sequitur. (… ghadamn! I spelled that correctly for the first time! (thnx to another lemmy user correcting me last time.))
      • bandwaggon fallacy.
      • red herring.

      But, that was a good point to raise. On face value, it is at first difficult to see how mere contradiction can be fallacious.

      (And I confess, only the first of those I came up with entirely by my self. The others were suggested by an LLM, with examples which I’ve omitted for brevity.)