How to Win Every Argument: The Use and Abuse of Logic (2006)

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112 How to Win Every Argument

Just the place for a Snark! I have said it thrice; what I tell you three times
is true.
(Whereas in fact if someone repeats the same thing three times it is
because he has nothing else to say.)

The point is that repetition adds nothing at all to the logic. It is
done in an attempt to persuade an audience, either by wearing
down their resistance, or by deceiving them into supposing that
objections have somehow been dealt with. Since they add
nothing, the extra versions are irrelevant to the consideration,
and fallaciously appeal to psychological factors rather than to
reason.

'Please sir, it wasn't me!'
'But this is your catapult, Smith Minor. '
'Please sir, it wasn't me!'
'And witnesses saw you pick up the stone. '
'Please sir, it wasn't me!'
(This could go on indefinitely, unless the heavy hand of an ad
baculum cuts it short. We can all spot that Smith Minor would have
done his case more good if he had been able to find anything else to
say. Would we spot it if he simply kept saying 'Socialism means rule
by the workers', however?)

Utterly discredited political credos, which adherents cling to
for other than intellectual reasons, are supported by the ad
nauseam fallacy. If an economic system brings general prosperity
and gives ordinary people access to the things which were once
the prerogative of the rich, it is quite difficult to make out a case
that this is exploitation. Fortunately, one does not have to. The
ad nauseam effect means that the charge can simply be repeated
over and over again without argument or evidence. Eventually,
some people will fall for it.

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