Well, that depends on what the premises and conclusion were. “That’s your opinion” can be used as a deflecting move if someone doesn’t want to have a particular debate at that particular moment (e.g. if the premises and conclusions were about something highly charged and the woman was not interested in having a highly charged debate). Ignoring a deflecting move could be considered a social blunder, and maybe that’s what the woman was responding to. There are a lot of ways to read this situation, and many of them are not “haha, look at how irrational this woman was.”
To avoid this, try the more honest “You’re dead wrong, possibly literally, but not important enough to be worth the time it’d take to save from your own stupidity by explaining why.”?
Well, that depends on what the premises and conclusion were. “That’s your opinion” can be used as a deflecting move if someone doesn’t want to have a particular debate at that particular moment (e.g. if the premises and conclusions were about something highly charged and the woman was not interested in having a highly charged debate). Ignoring a deflecting move could be considered a social blunder, and maybe that’s what the woman was responding to. There are a lot of ways to read this situation, and many of them are not “haha, look at how irrational this woman was.”
Unfortunately, a lot of people have taken to using these kinds of deflective moves to protect their irrational beliefs.
To avoid this, try the more honest “You’re dead wrong, possibly literally, but not important enough to be worth the time it’d take to save from your own stupidity by explaining why.”?