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Monday, June 2, 2008 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments

Document Character Attacks: How to Properly Apply the Ad Hominem

by Scientific American

Thanks to Logicel for the link.

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=character-attack

Character Attacks: How to Properly Apply the Ad Hominem
A new theory parses fair from unfair uses of personal criticism in rhetoric


By Yvonne Raley

A doctor tells her patient to lose weight, and the patient thinks: "If my doctor really believed that, she wouldn't be so fat." A movie aficionado pans the latest Tom Cruise flick because Cruise is a Scientologist. A home­owner ignores a neighbor's advice on lawn care because the neighbor is a ... you name it: Democrat, ­Re­publican, Christian or atheist. These examples illustrate classic uses of ad hominem attacks, in which an argument is rejected, or advanced, based on a personal characteristic of an individual rather than on reasons for or against the claim itself.

Putting the focus on the arguer or person being discussed can distract us from the issues that matter. Rather than concentrating on an individual's character, we should, in these cases, be asking ourselves questions such as, Is the doctor's advice medically sound? Is the Cruise film entertaining? Is the neighbor's lawn healthy? Meanwhile ad hominem attacks can also unfairly discredit an individual, especially because such critiques are often effective.

Although ad hominem arguments have long been considered errors in reasoning, a recent analysis suggests that this is not always the case. In his new book, Media Argumentation: Dialectic, Persuasion, and Rhetoric, University of Winnipeg philosopher Douglas Walton proposes that fallacies such as the ad hominem are better understood as perversions or corruptions of perfectly good arguments. Regarding the ad hominem, Walton contends that although such attacks are usually fallacious, they can be legitimate when a character critique is directly or indirect­ly related to the point being articulated.

If Walton is right, distinguishing clearly between these cases is important to evaluating the validity of statements people make to us about others. Good or fair uses of ad hominem critiques should, in fact, persuade us, whereas unwarranted uses should not.

Corruptions
Which ad hominem arguments should we aim to ignore? In the so-called abusive ad hominem, someone argues that because a person has a bad character, we should not accept that person's claims. For instance, during the presidential campaign of 1800, John Adams was called "a fool, a gross hypocrite and an unprincipled oppressor." His rival, Thomas Jefferson, on the other hand, was deemed "an uncivilized atheist, anti-American, a tool for the godless French." Accusations like these can easily foreclose on intelligent political discourse about what might make either candidate a good president.

Another illegitimate form of the ad hominem is the tu quoque, or "you, too" version, which is an attempt to discredit a person's claims because the person has failed to follow his or her own advice. The example of the overweight doctor prescribing weight loss falls into this category. Its use is unfair because, after all, there are good reasons for losing weight, and the fact that a doctor has not managed to heed her own advice should not dissuade others from trying to follow it.

The Cruise attack, on the other hand, exemplifies "poisoning the well," another brand of ad hominem attacks in which the character assault is launched before the listener has a chance to form his or her own opinion on a subject—in this case, Cruise's film. If successful, the reminder that Cruise is affiliated with Scientology will bias the listener against the movie. This partiality is unjustified, because Cruise's religious affiliation is not germane to his acting abilities or the entertainment value of his movie.

Fair Use
What types of ad hominems might then be justified? Walton argues that an ad hominem is valid when the claims made about a person's character or actions are relevant to the conclusions being drawn. Consider, for example, former New York governor Eliot Spitzer, who was caught on a wiretap arranging to hire a prostitute for $4,300. Because this behavior ran counter to Spitzer's anticorruption platform, its unveiling would prevent Spitzer from governing successfully; thus, criticizing this aspect of his character was relevant and fair. In an earlier scandal, in 1987, televangelist Jimmy Swaggart was seen at a motel with a prostitute. Because his behavior undercut his preaching and status as a Christian role model, a character attack based on this incident would have been spot-on.

In another case, when President Bill Clinton fibbed on national television about his affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, accusations that he was a liar were not entirely unjust. Although a supporter might argue that Clinton's sex life was not directly relevant to his ability to govern, his ability to adhere to the truth could certainly be, and his willingness to lie on this occasion could call into question the veracity of his remarks on other subjects.

Of course, we should not discount everything any person says, no matter how badly he or she has been discredited. The fact that a person lies or behaves improperly on one occasion does not mean that he or she lies or behaves inappropriately all the time. Again, a critique of a person's character should not prevent further examination of the arguments at hand. After all, which position is right is usually independent of a person's character or conduct.

Being aware of how the ad hominem attack works can help us evaluate which instances of its use we should ignore and which we should consider. Ask yourself: How relevant is a political candidate's character or action to his or her ability to perform in office? How pertinent is any person's past or group affiliation to the claims that person makes or to that individual's expertise in a specific domain? If the character-based attacks are not relevant to these larger issues, then they are best ignored. Instead we should attend to what is really important: What is a person asserting? Why does he or she offer a particular view, and is the view defensible?

This story was originally printed with the title, "Character Attacks".

Comments 51 - 60 of 60 |

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51. Comment #188483 by nancy2001 on June 4, 2008 at 6:32 am

I don't go to Tom Cruise movies because I refuse to subsidize his pro-Scientology activities. I can't stand the sight of this obnoxious man, and the thought of looking staring at his dreadful, smiling face plastered across the big screen for two endless hours makes my flesh crawl.

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52. Comment #188565 by BeyondBelief on June 4, 2008 at 7:54 am

 avatarGSP in 188295 wrote:

I argued that because Sam Harris, because he had, at best, a bachelors in philosophy when he first made that argument, was in no position to make such a statement.


This is not so much an ad hominem attack on Sam as it is another logical fallacy, the appeal to authority. It is a flavor of the "red herring" which is designed to distract the reader from the argument at hand by introducing irrelevant concerns. The quality of the argument made is NEVER determined by the credentials of the arguer. Arguments of that type are "ad Vericundiam"

You should know that here of all places, among free-thinkers who self-define as "unbound by tradition or authority", the above argument would be rightfully pooh-poohed or ignored as irrelevant noise.

Other folks: Help me out, I've never encountered GSP... am I being "trolled?"

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53. Comment #188573 by irate_atheist on June 4, 2008 at 8:02 am

 avatarI hoped this article was going to be a masterclass by the Reverand Dark.

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54. Comment #188648 by Barry Pearson on June 4, 2008 at 10:27 am

 avatar
irate_atheist said: Comment #188346 by Barry Pearson - Fascinating. A most interesting find. I commend it to the house.

hungarianelephant said: It seems to have been fairly heavily cut. Does anyone have a source which shows that it's not misleading?
I have no private sources of information about this. But, following a URL quoted in the video, I have now come to:
http://www.yoism.org/?q=node/377#BarackObamaOnReligion

It is the same video, but mentions a date: 6/28/06. (2006-06-28 in proper terminology!) I've used that to track it down, and here are different sources of the same transcript:
http://obama.senate.gov/podcast/060628-call_to_renewal_1/
http://www.barackobama.com/2006/06/28/call_to_renewal_keynote_address.php
http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=news.display_article&mode=C&NewsID=5454

The video starts well after half-way through the talk.

Other Comments by Barry Pearson

55. Comment #188677 by Barry Pearson on June 4, 2008 at 11:26 am

 avatar
BarelyEvolved said: It's a shame that politics is mostly debated (especially in the UK) by ad hominem arguments, and the actual details never truly presented to the people. I've tried looking at number10.gov.uk, labour.org.uk, et cetera for presentation and analysis of the costs, benefits, challenges and so on of proposals such as ID cards, but in the end I had to resort to being against a proposal by a paranoid, power-hungry party.
I once had the experience of being involved in some UK government legislation from end-to-end. I have recorded my experiences on the web. I may be able to offer insights into this!

The topic was Child Support. (I'm childfree! I was a business analyst in a consortium bidding to replace much of the UK's benefits/welfare computer systems. I became something of a world-expert on the topic of child support systems). My website that says more than you ever want to know about this topic is below. I think it may have been the world's biggest private website dedicated to any single topic of government policy.
http://www.childsupportanalysis.co.uk/

UK legislation goes through many stages. Below are the key stages for this legislation. I was involved throughout, and in fact I got involved before this. (I helped at the Green Paper and White Paper stages, and gave evidence to the Parliamentary Select Committee (oversight committee) responsible, so I am in Hansard. I also appeared as a studio guest on BBC TV, and an interview with me was broadcast on the Today programme on Radio 4). I corresponded a lot with ministers and senior civil servants and the media throughout.
http://www.childsupportanalysis.co.uk/information_and_explanation/reform/reformed_scheme_where_to_read.htm

Note that I started this website in August 2001, to help the UK prepare for what would be needed AFTER the failure of the new legislation. This was long BEFORE the new legislation was put into operation - it was THAT obvious that it would eventually be a failure! And, of course, it DID fail - even faster than I had expected. Some of my ideas appear to have found their way into the replacement version, but I don't know whether this was because of what I did, or simply because much of what I said was something that any reasonably analytical person with enough time would eventually see. When all else fails, do proper analysis!

The legislation was a triumph of wishful thinking over realistic expectations, of dogma over evidence-based reasoning. The basics of the legislation had been fixed (and leaked!) well before the earliest consultation stage. I THINK something I said made a bit of difference, but the resultant modification was so bizarre that I would be embarrassed to own up to it!
http://www.childsupportanalysis.co.uk/information_and_explanation/reform/reformed_scheme_overview_programme.htm

Another problem, common to ID cards, is that European and GATT rules (as they were then) tie the UK government's hands when making procurements. They have to go with low bids to avoid accusations of favouritism, and some companies are brilliant at playing this game. (You rely on the government to fail to have a useful specification for the procurement, you bid low to get the bid, then you ramp up the price massively to make even the smallest necessary change. And you typically already have the costs for those changes worked out before the government realises they are necessary! They can't eject you at this stage without setting back the whole project by several years. Your consultants have become part of the government's decision-making process).

I think "wishful thinking" and "dogma", ably assisted by "cronies in companies that will benefit", is more descriptive than "power-hungry". They had power already - they could have done something sensible with it.

I'm willing to discuss this further - I've been bottling this up for a long time!

Other Comments by Barry Pearson

56. Comment #188780 by Szymanowski on June 4, 2008 at 2:17 pm

 avatar
Character Attacks: How to Properly Apply the Ad Hominem

This article must be rubbish, because the author improperly splits infinitives.

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57. Comment #188827 by emmet on June 4, 2008 at 5:27 pm

 avatarObama's "Candidates@Google" talk/interview is pretty interesting too (if a bit long). During the Q&A, he's very strong on science and reason as the basis for political decision-making. It's very encouraging:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m4yVlPqeZwo

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58. Comment #188888 by RightWingAtheist on June 4, 2008 at 11:35 pm

 avatarSzymanowski:

I have never agreed with what I believe to be an arbitrary ban on splitting infinitives.

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59. Comment #189314 by BarelyEvolved on June 6, 2008 at 2:39 am

Barry, sorry for the long delay, it's been a busy week. Thanks for your post, it's very interesting (/depressing!) about the state of government policy, and I think your link and experience has verified my fears.

This supposedly online government has a lot to learn, in a society that will be basing it's informed decisions on Wikipedia articles instead of policy committee constructive analysis.

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60. Comment #189939 by Frankus1122 on June 7, 2008 at 8:20 pm

 avatarSkutter:

I think Barry Pearson meant to say by Comment #187948, this:

Yes, it does.

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