This is a great point that’s making me revise my position on some right wing commentators. Still, I’m struggling to think of any actual examples of this behavior in action: we don’t actually tell religious people who believe wrong things “well god ain’t real deal with it”. We point out how their assertions are incompatible with their own teachings, and with the legal system, and scientific findings etc. We don’t keep all the flaws we see in their position back in reserve.
Moreover most of the serious commentators on the skeptical side of the issue argued only one of the points in question, whether it was the statistics showing warming or the economics implied by it or (cue rim-shot) sunspots, it’s only journalists and politicians who skipped from one to the other, which is where I got the impression they’d only looked at the issue long enough to find a contrarian position.
I’m struggling to think of any actual examples of this behavior in action
If you’ve ever said or thought “Okay, just for the sake of argument, I’ll assume your point X is correct...” you were holding a position back in reserve.
One typical example is arguing with a religious nut that what he’s saying is incompatible with the teachings in his own holy book. Suppose he wins this argument (unlikely, I know, but bear with me...) and demonstrates that you were mistaken and no, his holy book really does teach that we should burn scientists as witches. Do you immediately conclude that yes, we should burn scientists as witches? No, because you don’t actually hold in high esteem the teachings in his holy book.
This is a great point that’s making me revise my position on some right wing commentators. Still, I’m struggling to think of any actual examples of this behavior in action: we don’t actually tell religious people who believe wrong things “well god ain’t real deal with it”. We point out how their assertions are incompatible with their own teachings, and with the legal system, and scientific findings etc. We don’t keep all the flaws we see in their position back in reserve.
Moreover most of the serious commentators on the skeptical side of the issue argued only one of the points in question, whether it was the statistics showing warming or the economics implied by it or (cue rim-shot) sunspots, it’s only journalists and politicians who skipped from one to the other, which is where I got the impression they’d only looked at the issue long enough to find a contrarian position.
If you’ve ever said or thought “Okay, just for the sake of argument, I’ll assume your point X is correct...” you were holding a position back in reserve.
One typical example is arguing with a religious nut that what he’s saying is incompatible with the teachings in his own holy book. Suppose he wins this argument (unlikely, I know, but bear with me...) and demonstrates that you were mistaken and no, his holy book really does teach that we should burn scientists as witches. Do you immediately conclude that yes, we should burn scientists as witches? No, because you don’t actually hold in high esteem the teachings in his holy book.