Semantics whoring
Posted: 2009-02-24 09:03am
How to deal with it? My current tactic is to tell them to stop being whiny little bitches, but it doesn't seem to faze them.
Instead, when you tell them to go look it up in the dictionary, they bring out gems like this:
This is the second time in the last month that someone's tried to turn a debate into semantics whoring, and it's not as though they're even doing it about particularly controversial or charged words. The first time it was with "bisexual" (Apparently for that guy, "The dictionary doesn't define my life") and this time it's with "gullible and easily persuaded". I can only assume they're doing it because they know their argument doesn't have two feet to stand on, because if it did, then you'd think they'd just accept the definition that I pulled out of the dictionary for the sake making the argument move along.
Instead, when you tell them to go look it up in the dictionary, they bring out gems like this:
I really don't want to bog the debate down into "No. Really, the dictionary definition of gullible is right," but that's what they seem to want to turn it into.I haven't even said that the dictionaries were inadmissible, only that it is ridiculous to believe that they settle anything by virtue of being The Almighty Dictionary. They don't. Jesus.
This is the second time in the last month that someone's tried to turn a debate into semantics whoring, and it's not as though they're even doing it about particularly controversial or charged words. The first time it was with "bisexual" (Apparently for that guy, "The dictionary doesn't define my life") and this time it's with "gullible and easily persuaded". I can only assume they're doing it because they know their argument doesn't have two feet to stand on, because if it did, then you'd think they'd just accept the definition that I pulled out of the dictionary for the sake making the argument move along.