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Showing posts with label defending the faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label defending the faith. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

The Straw Man Argument



I'm posting this because it's good information for anyone anywhere in the world to know...

A note to Christians - this fallacy has been used both to defend our position and to criticize it. 

Let's be careful not to use it  - or fall for it!

 

Straw man

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from Straw man argument)



A straw man is a component of an argument and is an informal fallacy based on misrepresentation of an opponent's position.[1] To "attack a straw man" is to create the illusion of having refuted a proposition by replacing it with a superficially similar yet unequivalent proposition (the "straw man"), and refuting it, without ever having actually refuted the original position.[1][2]

Origin

The origins of the term are unclear. One common (folk) etymology given is that it originated with men who stood outside courthouses with a straw in their shoe in order to indicate their willingness to be a false witness, but it is unlikely that individuals would publicly declare their willingness to commit a crime outside a courthouse.[3][4] Another more popular origin is a human figure made of straw, such as practice dummies used in military training. Such a dummy is supposed to represent the enemy, but it is considerably easier to attack because naturally, it neither moves nor fights back.

[edit]

In the UK, the adversary is sometimes called Aunt Sally, with reference to a traditional fairground game.

[edit]Reasoning

The straw man fallacy occurs in the following pattern of argument:

1.   Person A has position X.
2.   Person B disregards certain key points of X and instead presents the superficially similar position Y. Thus, Y is a resulting distorted version of X and can be set up in several ways, including:

1. Presenting a misrepresentation of the opponent's position.
2. Quoting an opponent's words out of context — i.e. choosing quotations that misrepresent the opponent's actual intentions (see fallacy of quoting out of context).[2]
3. Presenting someone who defends a position poorly as the defender, then refuting that person's arguments — thus giving the appearance that every upholder of that position (and thus the position itself) has been defeated.[1]
4. Inventing a fictitious persona with actions or beliefs which are then criticized, implying that the person represents a group of whom the speaker is critical.
5. Oversimplifying an opponent's argument, then attacking this oversimplified version.

3.   Person B attacks position Y, concluding that X is false/incorrect/flawed.
This sort of "reasoning" is fallacious, because attacking a distorted version of a position fails to constitute an attack on the actual position.

[edit]Examples

Straw man arguments often arise in public debates such as a (hypothetical) prohibition debate:
Person A: We should liberalize the laws on beer.
Person B: No, any society with unrestricted access to intoxicants loses its work ethic and goes only for immediate gratification.
The proposal was to relax laws on beer. Person B has exaggerated this to a position harder to defend, i.e., "unrestricted access to intoxicants".[1] It is a logical fallacy because Person A never made that claim. This example is also a slippery slope fallacy.
Another example:
Person A: Our society should spend more money helping the poor.
Person B: Studies show that handouts don't work; they just create more poverty and humiliate the recipients. That money could be better spent.
In this case, Person B has transformed Person A's position from "more money" to "more handouts", which is easier for Person B to defeat.

[edit]See also

§         List of fallacies
§         Ad hominem
§         Cherry picking (fallacy)
§         Straw man proposal
§         Straw man (law)
[edit]

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

10 things the CNN Belief Blog learned in its first year



Obviously, there is a myriad of opinions on CNN's Belief Blog and I still cringe at the word "religion" but nonetheless this is an extremely interesting article.

Its worth the quick read whatever you believe or do not believe...


10 Things the Belief Blog learned in its first year







10 things the Belief Blog learned in its first year


By Dan Gilgoff, CNN.com Religion Editor


(CNN) – In case you were wondering about all the balloons and cake: CNN’s Belief Blog has just marked its first birthday.


After publishing 1,840 posts and sifting through 452,603 comments (OK, we may have missed one or two) the Belief Blog feels older than its 12 months would suggest. But it also feels wiser, having followed the faith angles of big news stories, commissioned lots of commentary and, yes, paid attention to all those reader comments for a solid year.


10 things we've learned:


1. Every big news story has a faith angle. Even the ordeal of 33 Chilean miners trapped underground for more than two months. Even the attempted assassination of Arizona congresswoman Gabby Giffords. Even March Madness. Even – well, you get the point.

( ***Its like he read my mind - I wrote this note a while back: Welcome To Life; Some Thoughts on the Chilean Mine Rescue    joe)



2. Atheists are the most fervent commenters on matters religious. This became apparent immediately after the Belief Blog's first official post last May, which quickly drew such comments as:


acerider

Can we have a fairy tale blog too?


Sunil

This is nothing but America moving away from its wondrous spirit of Apollo 11 into a mindset of the perpetually intellectually challenged.

I think there was some news today about scientists having created the first artificial cell. That should have been a HUGE story. And yet, what do we get? A faith blog. Pathetic.


Rachel

This blog is terrifying. It's amazing how much power the radical religious right is amassing in our country right now. If I can't have some legislation, can I at least have some news that does not cater to zealots?


Those early comments presaged an avalanche of alternately humorous and outraged atheist responses on virtually everything the Belief Blog publishes. They're more evidence that atheists are coming out of the closet to trumpet their disbelief, argue with the faithful and evangelize their godlessness. (It's worth noting that the Belief Blog does plenty of atheism stories.)


3. People are still intensely curious about the Bible, its meaning and its origins.


It's an ancient tome, but more than any other book in the Western tradition (with the Quran being the lone exception), the Bible still fascinates us. And it still feeds our most heated debates. In February, a guest post here arguing that the Bible is more ambiguous on homosexuality than traditionally thought elicited more than 4,000 comments. A response post insisting that the Bible clearly condemns homosexuality brought in an equal number of comments - and was the most popular story on CNN.com on the day it was published.


Other Belief Blog pieces about biblical scholarship - including a recent offering about biblical misquotations – have also caught fire. More of us may be reading it on iPhones these days, but the Good Book still matters a lot more than the popular culture lets on.


4. Most Americans are religiously illiterate. Despite the appetite for stories and commentary about the Bible, most Americans know little about it. A huge Pew survey released in September found that most Americans scored 50 percent or less on a quiz measuring knowledge of the Bible, world religions and what the Constitution says about religion in public life. Ironically, atheists and agnostics scored best. How did you do on the quiz?


5. It's impossible to understand much of the news without knowing something about religion. Why did the Egyptian revolution happen on a Friday? Why was Osama bin Laden's body buried so quickly after he was killed? Why did Afghan rioters kill seven United Nations workers in April? You simply can't answer those questions without bringing in religion.


6. Regardless of where they fit on the spectrum, people want others to understand what they believe. That goes for pagans, fundamentalist Mormons,Native Americans, atheists – everyone.


7. Americans still have an uneasy relationship with Islam. Nearly 10 years after the September 11 attacks provoked many Americans to pay attention to Islam for the first time, much of the country is still somewhat uncomfortable about the religion, which counts 1.5 billion followers worldwide.


The biggest domestic religion story in the Belief Blog's young life was probably last year's opposition to a proposed Islamic Center and mosque near New York's ground zero. And with the 10-year anniversary of the 9/11 attacks approaching, domestic tensions around Islam may flare again. The Arab Spring, meanwhile is raising weighty questions about Islam's role in post-autocratic regimes, guaranteeing the religion - and its relationship with the U.S. – will be one of the world's big stories for years to come.


8. God may not prevent natural disasters, but religion is always a big part of the response. We see it play out every time Mother Nature delivers a punishing blow, from March's Japan earthquake and tsunami to the recent tornado that flattened much of Joplin, Missouri.


9. Apocalyptic movements come and go. The May 21st doomsdayers drew loads of interest, largely thanks to a massive ad campaign, but they're hardly original.


10. Most Americans don't know that President Barack Obama is a Christian. It's ironic, since church-based community organizing led him to politics and since hisclose relationship with a pastor almost sunk his presidential campaign, but that's what a Pew poll found last year.


Only about a third of Americans correctly identified Obama's religion, while nearly one in five said he's a Muslim. Another irony: The longer Obama's been in office, the smaller the proportion of Americans who can correctly name his faith. As the 2012 presidential race approaches, this story bears watching, since views of candidates' religion influence voting patterns.








Posted by: Dan Gilgoff - CNN Belief Blog Co-Editor

A related article you may be interested in:   Evangelical?

Thursday, June 2, 2011

The Thinking and Faithful Christian


  “A student came up to me once after one of my lectures and said, “How come everything you say confirms what my Pastor always taught?” Somewhat amazed, I laughed and said, “Why shouldn’t it?” He replied, “Well, all of the other men in the department challenge my faith.” 

My response was, “Look, I don’t want to challenge your faith; I want to challenge your thinking. But I want to build up your faith.”

Dr. William Lane Craig




This article is made up mainly of a passage from a book by a Christian Philosopher , Dr William Lane Craig. He is very well respected amongst his peers  - both believers and non.

My reason for posting this is borne out of a concern for two things:

1)      The trend of some young Christians losing their faith at various levels of higher education – including Christian Universities.

2)      The lack of some Christians to be able to “provide a reason for the hope that lies in you.” , and to find reasonable answers to their questions and those of others - as if thinking were a bad thing. Thinking and logic is needed. I often think of this example – If I were born into a cult, how would I ever get out of it without using some reason and good questions?

A good example of a godly manner of doing this is recounted by Dr. Craig:

 “A student came up to me once after one of my lectures and said, “How come everything you say confirms what my Pastor always taught?” Somewhat amazed, I laughed and said, “Why shouldn’t it?” He replied, “Well, all of the other men in the department challenge my faith.” My response was, “Look, I don’t want to challenge your faith; I want to challenge your thinking. But I want to build up your faith.”




The passage….

Sometimes people would justify their lack of intellectual engagement by asserting that they prefer having a “simple faith”. But here I think we must distinguish between a childlike faith and a childish faith. A childlike faith is a whole-souled trust in God as one’s loving Heavenly Father, and Jesus commends such a faith to us. But a childish faith is an immature, unreflective faith, and such a faith is not commended to us. On the contrary, Paul says, “Do not be children in your thinking; be babes in evil, but in thinking be mature.” (1 Corinthians 15:20) …….



Thinking about your faith is, indeed, a virtue, for it helps you to better understand and defend your faith. But thinking about your faith is not equivalent to doubting your faith.

We need to keep the distinct clear. A student came up to me once after one of my lectures and said, “ How come everything you say confirms what my Pastor always taught?” Somewhat amazed, I laughed and said, “ Why shouldn’t it?” He replied, “Well, all of the other men in the department challenge my faith.” My response was, “Look, I don’t want to challenge your faith; I want to challenge your thinking. But I want to build up your faith.”

My experience as a young Christian of seeing some of my college classmates lose their faith left a deep impression on me, and when I began teaching I resolved to do all I could to help my students stay in the faith while still exploring the intellectual issues about the faith. In particular, I resolved never to present objections to Christianity without also presenting and defending various solutions to those objections. One of my colleagues who did not follow this method was causing some concern among Christian students in his classes. :I was only trying to get them to think,” he explained to me. “I was just playing the devil’s advocate.”

Those words hit me like a dash of cold water. For him they were merely a manner of speaking, but it was their literal sense that struck me. Playing the devil’s advocate. Think of it: to be Satan’s advocate in the classroom! That is something we must never allow ourselves to become. As Christian teachers, students, and laymen, we must never lose sight of the wider spiritual battle in which we are all involved and so must be extremely wary of what we say or write, lest we become the instruments of Satan in destroying someone else’s faith. We can challenge people to think more deeply and rigorously about their Christian faith without encouraging them to doubt their faith.

From “Hard Questions, Real Answers” by Dr. William Lane Craig

William Lane Craig is research professor of philosophy at Talbot School of Theology in La Mirada, California. He earned degrees from Wheaton College (B.A.), Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (M.A. 1974; M.A. 1975), The University of Birmingham, England (Ph.D.), and the University of Munich (D. Theol.). Dr. Craig is an international lecturer and has written numerous articles and books.

For more on the topic  of Faith, intellect, apologetics and mission please check out this re-post:   Apologetics Is Not Apologizing - Re-post From Justin Holcomb

Apologetics Is Not Apologizing - Re-Post from Justin Holcomb


"Apologetics is something that you engage in every time you share your beliefs and convictions with your fellow Christians, with your children, and with non-believers. It is not an irrelevant or formal discipline reserved for intellectuals. Apologetics is a tool for mission."
 Re-posting from Justin Holcomb and The Resurgence:
 

Apologetics on Mission

Justin Holcomb » Mission Worldviews Evangelism Apologetics

What Is Apologetics?

The word “apologetics” is from the Greek word apologia, which means “the act of making a defense.” This word is used several times in the New Testament, but its usage in two passages is particularly relevant. In Philippians 1:7 &16, apologia refers to a defense of the gospel, and in 1 Peter 3:15 it refers to a defense of the Christian hope.
Apologetics is “an activity of the Christian mind which attempts to show that the gospel message is true in what it affirms. An apologist is one who is prepared to defend the message against criticism and distortion, and to give evidences of its credibility.

Defensive Apologetics

One form of apologetics is to defend the gospel from challenges. Defensive apologetics is the defense of the Christian faith by showing that the objections to the true claims of Christianity cannot and do not stand. Defensive apologetics addresses objections to the concept of God’s Triunity, to the problem of evil, to the Resurrection, to biblical criticism, and so forth.
For example, negative apologetics is used to rebut the claim that the doctrine of the Trinity “is an Error in counting or numbering; which, when stood in, is of all others the most brutal and inexcusable.” Negative apologetics will show that the doctrine of the Trinity is at least possibly true.
Another example is to defend against the charge that the bible contains errors, contradictions, or inconsistencies. To give answers to the challenges that Jesus rose from the dead is also defensive apologetics.

Positive Apologetics

Another form of apologetics is to offer reasons to believe the gospel. Positive apologetics is the use of Christian evidences to demonstrate the viability of the Christian faith. Apologetics intends to “show”, in a positive manner, that the claims of the Christian faith are indeed intellectually defensible and rationally justifiable.
This is the method of making a positive case for the validity and truth of the claims made in Christian Scripture such as the resurrection of Christ, the existence of God, and the historical reliability of the Bible.

Critiquing Unbelief

Another use of apologetics is critiquing unbelief, which combines both the positive and negative forms. Some streams of apologetics seek to show that unbelief is irrational and that holding to views such as relativism will lead one to undesirable and irrational conclusions.
For example, holding to relativism entails that no universal ethical norm can be present since there is no objective truth to ground morality. This type of apologetics moves from the critique to a positive construction that shows how the Christian faith provides an alternative and logical worldview that best makes sense of the reality in which we live.
Apologetics is something that you engage in every time you share your beliefs and convictions with your fellow Christians, with your children, and with non-believers.
Explaining how karma is a cruel and devastating belief is another form of critiquing unbelief. Karma claims that if someone is suffering or in pain, they deserve it and to help them is to go against the cosmic law (dharma) at play.
Another example is that atheism leads to moral chaos. On what basis can an atheist say anything (genocide, sexual assault, child abuse, etc) is bad or wrong? If ethics is based on opinion or consensus, then morality is determined by whoever has the most power. If nature is “red in tooth and claw” and survival of the fittest is true and good, then domination of one animal over another in any form can’t be called bad or wrong in a naturalistic worldview but rather celebrated as the outworking of the principles of the atheist worldview.

Apologetics on Mission

Apologetics is something that you engage in every time you share your beliefs and convictions with your fellow Christians, with your children, and with non-believers. It is not an irrelevant or formal discipline reserved for intellectuals. Apologetics is a tool for mission.
For more, check out this video about Apologetics of the Mission.

  From Joe - On the topic of "faith and intellect" you may want to read this post about a defining principle from Dr. William Lane Craig:   The Thinking and Faithful Christian