P
Penguin
Guest
I don't understand why, but many people tell me that I sound like an unintelligent five year old when I argue.
I get good grades, do very well on english essays, have an excellent vocabulary, am in the John Hopkins talented youth program, and spend a lot of time pondering human nature.
I will provide a run down of my latest argument:
Me: "If the meaning of life is happiness, then couldn't a person who dropped out of high school and spends all of their time watching TV have a fulfilling life, because they are happy?"
Them: "They won't always be happy. They're going to get sick of it. They aren't learning anything."
Me: "Why do you need to learn?"
Them: "It's human nature. You HAVE to learn. It's what separates humans from other animals."
Me: "How do you know? Who said that? Can you prove it?"
Them: "You just need to learn. Your brain needs it."
Me: "There's no proof."
Them: "You sound retarded! I thought you were an intelligent person, but you just sound stupid!"
I was told that it was a circular argument with no purpose, and that my questions were unintelligent because they consisted solely of "Why?".
I'd like to get this figured out so I won't embarrass myself anymore. I just don't see how my questioning is uneducated! What's wrong with discussing a pointless topic? It keeps you busy. What else are you going to do, watch TV? Why is it important to have a point?
"Them" isn't the John Hopkins crowd. "Them" is my mother and 13 year old brother.
I still feel as though I am inept. I once tried to debate with a very intelligent teacher, who totally destroyed my logic.
Perhaps I am just too eager for a fight? Even though I don't have a point, I get very emotional in basically playing devils advocate to whatever their opinion may be. I'm not proving anything, I'm just questioning them to see who they really are. I want to know if their beliefs run to their very core, or they just accept them because everyone else does.
How can I get away from circular questions? I don't know how to question other than asking "why?". I feel like anything else, like, "Do you think X because Y?" would just be nudging them to agree with me, or manipulating them into some other topic where I can beat them. I don't want to "win", I just want to know WHY they think what they think.
I get good grades, do very well on english essays, have an excellent vocabulary, am in the John Hopkins talented youth program, and spend a lot of time pondering human nature.
I will provide a run down of my latest argument:
Me: "If the meaning of life is happiness, then couldn't a person who dropped out of high school and spends all of their time watching TV have a fulfilling life, because they are happy?"
Them: "They won't always be happy. They're going to get sick of it. They aren't learning anything."
Me: "Why do you need to learn?"
Them: "It's human nature. You HAVE to learn. It's what separates humans from other animals."
Me: "How do you know? Who said that? Can you prove it?"
Them: "You just need to learn. Your brain needs it."
Me: "There's no proof."
Them: "You sound retarded! I thought you were an intelligent person, but you just sound stupid!"
I was told that it was a circular argument with no purpose, and that my questions were unintelligent because they consisted solely of "Why?".
I'd like to get this figured out so I won't embarrass myself anymore. I just don't see how my questioning is uneducated! What's wrong with discussing a pointless topic? It keeps you busy. What else are you going to do, watch TV? Why is it important to have a point?
"Them" isn't the John Hopkins crowd. "Them" is my mother and 13 year old brother.
I still feel as though I am inept. I once tried to debate with a very intelligent teacher, who totally destroyed my logic.
Perhaps I am just too eager for a fight? Even though I don't have a point, I get very emotional in basically playing devils advocate to whatever their opinion may be. I'm not proving anything, I'm just questioning them to see who they really are. I want to know if their beliefs run to their very core, or they just accept them because everyone else does.
How can I get away from circular questions? I don't know how to question other than asking "why?". I feel like anything else, like, "Do you think X because Y?" would just be nudging them to agree with me, or manipulating them into some other topic where I can beat them. I don't want to "win", I just want to know WHY they think what they think.