I participated in the debating society when I was at school, and I ran a school debating society when I became a teacher. When I taught philosophy, one of my methods was to discover as quickly as possible which side of a question was favoured by the students, and then argue the opposite.
I cannot sufficiently stress how vital it is to be able to argue from your opponents’ position. To begin with, if you cannot anticipate their arguments, they will take you by surprise in the debate and embarrass you.If you cannot anticipate their arguments, you cannot prepare answers to their arguments in advance and have them ready when required.
And finally, how do you even know which side you are on, if you have never taken the trouble to learn why your opponents think differently? You will be incapable of rational decision because you have only ever heard one side of the case. You will have to resort to bluster and prejudice because you won’t be able to reason. This is not a good idea.
I draw your attention to the method by which Boris Johnson, former Prime Minister of the UK, decided which side of the Brexit argument he would choose. He wrote two articles, one explaining why we should remain in the EU, and one explaining why we should leave, and then compared them in order to discover which was the more persuasive. Some people attacked him over this for having no convictions; I thought, here at least, he displayed a preference for reason over emotion.
You should try this approach. It will be of lasting benefit.
Showing posts with label debate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debate. Show all posts
Tuesday, 10 January 2023
How do I argue for something I don't believe in? (Quora)
Labels:
debate,
rational discussion,
rationality,
reason,
rhetoric
Tuesday, 26 August 2014
No-one can stop us!
"No-one can
stop us using the pound!"
That is true.
No-one could stop us using the dollar or the yen either, if we chose
to do so. It just wouldn't be smart. Neither would using the pound
outside the UK currency union.
No-one can stop
Panama and Ecuador using the dollar, so they do use it. But the
dollar is a foreign currency, controlled by a foreign country. These
two Latin American countries allow the USA to enforce fiscal and
monetary discipline upon them because they can't easily do it
themselves. They have to generate trade surpluses in order to
accumulate domestic spending power. Their governments are not
masters of their own economies.
So if Scotland wants
to wrest control of monetary policy away from London only to hand it
straight back again, this time with no influence over it whatsoever,
then yes, no-one can stop us.
On the other hand,
good luck generating the trade surplus needed to pay for the promised
fairer society after the financial services industry has been forced
to move south of the border in order to stay in the same jurisdiction
as its lender of last resort. Most Scottish financial products are
exported to the UK.
Good luck obtaining
a fair share of The Bank of England's foreign currency reserves after
you've refused to take a fair share of the UK national debt.
Good luck finding
people to purchase Scottish government bonds when you've shown
yourself likely to default whenever you don't get what you want.
But we can always
console ourselves with the thought that no-one could stop us!
Labels:
Alex Salmond,
Bank of England,
banks,
currency,
currency union,
debate,
Finance,
independence,
independent,
monetary policy,
Monetary Policy Committee,
referendum,
Scotland
Monday, 24 February 2014
Let's Try Talking
The importance of calm,
reasoned discussion of disagreements cannot be overstated. If the
objective is to find the right answer, or even an acceptable answer,
then a polite and respectful exchange of views is likely to be the
best way to proceed.
The way I see it, we
either have to go on living together after our disagreements or erect
permanent walls of hostility to keep out those we call 'them'.
Banning discussion or howling down those of a contrary view are both
ways of ensuring that disagreement will be followed by ill-feeling.
Resentment is likely to simmer away; everybody is convinced that they
would have been proved right if only talks had continued and nobody's
understanding is improved in any way.
Both methods of
suppressing discussion are ultimately self-defeating. Not only can
you not win a discussion that you do not allow to take place, you
are, more importantly, prevented from coming closer to your
neighbour, understanding his point of view and making allowances for
things that are of little importance to you and of great importance
to him.
Even when points of
view seem irreconcilable, it is important not to stop talking.
Retreating into an entrenched and isolated hostility to contrary
views is the way to conflict born out of enduring ignorance.
Labels:
aggression,
agressive,
argument,
debate,
discussion,
polite,
politeness,
rationality,
reason
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