aioqwe wrote:And ew to long posts, please don't ever make me have to come up with something that long ever again.
I'll try to focus on what I consider the most salient points, and why they lead me to believe you're scum. If there are any points I ignore which you want a response on, just let me know. I'll warn you now, though - this is a long post regardless. That's just my trademark, I guess.
aioqwe wrote:Seol wrote:You're thinking
illogically
I could be scum or I could be drunk or just on a lack of sleep. Perhaps I’m misrepresenting my situation.
Logical errors could be a result of being drunk, or loss of sleep. Only thing is, I didn't accuse you of thinking illogically (you modified my quote). I accused you of thinking like scum, which is different. It's not about errors in your thought process, it's about your thought process operating in a fundamentally different way to an enquiring mind. Specifically:
Seol wrote:This all feels like you're trying to find ways to justify an attack and then present the reasons as the basis, rather than actually having reasons. It's all backwards logic.
Thinking backwards isn't explained by simply being sloppy. It's explained by thinking backwards. Town don't need to think backwards - they see behaviour, they judge behaviour, they draw conclusions from it. Mafia don't draw conclusions from behaviour, because they're not looking for scum - they're looking for people to lynch. What they look for is things to attack.
Town see anomalous behaviour, and they try to work out whether it's scummy or not. Scum see anomolous behaviour, and try to find a way to attack people for it. You did the latter. The fact that a) your conclusions didn't follow from the premise and b) when challenged on it, you then found a bunch of
other
ways to interpret that same anomolous behaviour that didn't follow from the premise as scummy showed that you weren't trying to work out if Wile's actions were suspicious or not, you were trying to find a way to argue they were.
Your response:
aioqwe wrote:True, but I don’t think there’s any reason to attack anymore.
Doesn't help your case. That argument wasn't an argument that the attack was flawed, it was an argument that you're approaching the problem from a scum mentality, not a town mentality. That you don't see any need to contest my assertion your thought process is about finding an attack,
then
finding a justification
is acknowledging that you are thinking like scum
. When you say things like:
aioqwe wrote:Do you think misrepresentation is scummy? I think its scummy, and I'm just trying to figure out how its scummy. If my original conclusion begins to not make sense, I look back and examine and see if given the evidence can make sense in a different case.
Again with the deciding the conclusion before you reach the reasoning. What he was doing wasn't misrepresentation anyway, as you later admit.
You, however,
have
been misrepresenting - case in point, your quotehack from "you're thinking like scum" to "you're thinking illogically". I'm pretty sure you weren't trying to do that on the sly, as you italicised it for emphasis, so it's blatant rather than covert misrepresentation. There, you were representing my argument as being one of your arguments being poor - which was only a part of my argument, and not the crucial part either. That was you misrepresenting me, and that
was
scummy - it was clearly deliberate, and taken at face value it changed the nature of my argument.
Another example - you misrepresented your own prior positions when you said Wile had nothing to defend against (a point you have now conceded). Again, scummy, because you're attempting to evade accountability and further focus on your prior position as that position becomes untenable.
Yes, misrepresentation can most definitely be scummy, especially where it's clear, deliberate, and can benefit the user. That's true of you, and not of Wile.
aioqwe wrote:Seol wrote:It was a very curious conclusion to come to in the first place, and it was also curious when I first pointed out what I thought was the obvious objection to it (that scum wouldn't want to prepare a cover-story which would get them just as lynched as the truth would) that you didn't even seem to register that it was a problem.
Perhaps I'm just not bright. If something I jump to makes sense I'll just post it and see how the idea flows?
Firstly, I don't think you're stupid. Not at all. You've been arguing coherently and intelligently that last post of yours, and you've been measured in what you chose to concede and what you chose to contest (interestingly, it's often on the most defensible points as opposed to the most indicting points).
You can identify a bad argument when you see it. What's interesting is you didn't appear to take that approach then. You didn't want to "see how the idea flows". You
reinforced
your position instead of exploring it.
That's not what people do when they don't have faith in their argument, and when people
do
have faith in a
reasoned
argument they address the objection. You're capable of both of these, but you did neither. So a) your behaviour isn't explained by a lack of ability, and b) if it was, you've shown that you're sufficiently flexible and capable of reasoning that the explanation doesn't fit particularly well.
One last point, seeing as I'm done with the Coron wagon for now:
aioqwe wrote:Am I Coron's scum buddy? Do you still think Coron is scum?
I never thought Coron was scum. My reasons for voting him, and then pushing the wagon on him, had nothing to do with anything he'd said or done. I was much more interested in what effect the wagon had on other people. I think I got some interesting results, but it's inconclusive thusfar.
Albert B. Rampage wrote:I'm unopinionated.
Piffle. You might not yet be totally convinced by my arguments, but you've got a stance, or you wouldn't be asking. Such statements are
far
more useful to us when there's uncertainty, where there isn't a cut and dried winner. Firstly, we don't want anything decided on the basis of who's a better arguer, we want this decided on the quality of the arguments - they're much more likely to tell us who's scum. Secondly, it's a waste of a day if it boils down to two people talking and ten people watching. This isn't a spectator sport.
Why are you afraid to state your position?
Same goes to Patrick.