Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I gave Israel the benefit of the doubt, plus extra. Giving someone the benefit of the doubt is a common way to make arguments more persuasive by avoiding nitpicks.

So it's convenient for that specific reason. Why do you act like convenience is ipso facto bad?

How does it make my argument less persuasive?

I will point out that picking a number below both of them only works when I'm arguing that even my number is still too high. If I was arguing that something is sufficiently low, my "still sufficiently low" number would have to be above both of their numbers.

Let me make an analogy: Two people are arguing about whether a crashed car would take $3000 or $4000 to repair. I come in and point out that any number above $2500 would mean it's totaled, so the car is totaled and that's the important part. $2500 is not the exact threshold, but I'm confident that the exact threshold is less than or equal to $2500.

By introducing the convenient number of $2500, have I ruined the persuasiveness of my argument? If so, how? Please explain beyond just accusing it of being convenient.



If you didn't like the party claiming $4000 should be the limit, and the party claiming $3000 dollars were a subject matter expect - which you are not - then I would say that picking $2500 is convenient to your attempt to attack the first party, which makes your argument less persuasive.

A point so basic that only the person with the bias could fail to see it. Convenient arguments, in my experience, are a sign one needs to rethink, not double down. YMMV, obviously.


> If you didn't like the party claiming $4000 should be the limit

If that's what I was fighting, I would agree with you.

But it's not. By avoiding the word famine and loudly announcing that I am doing so, I am explicitly not picking that fight.

I'm accepting the expertise of both parties, and making an argument that doesn't disagree with the claims of either party.

Israel says it's not famine, I say that's not good enough. Simple.

> Convenient arguments, in my experience, are a sign one needs to rethink, not double down.

Again, every argument that gives the benefit of the doubt would fall under "convenient". Including many arguments you have no problem with. If you took the car example as a completely standalone argument, unchanged from how I originally stated it (so there would be nobody claiming "$4000 should be the limit"), would you have any problems with it?




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: