When you're older you'll realise that naming fallacies is just a lazy way of avoiding having to counter difficult arguments.
If "you're too young to understand" is a poor argument in the context then counter it by explaining why, don't reach for the list of accepted fallacies. That would be an argumentum ad verecundiam. — Isaac
I think your concerns are genuine, but oft times people like to impress us with their knowledge of Latin. I'm not even sure if there is a name for this fallacy, but I'd call it "argumentum-ad-you-should-be-intimidated-by-my-genius-and-if-you-aren't-other-readers-might-think-I'm-pretty-wise-and-I'll-play-to-them-and-win-that-way." — James Riley
In conclusion, if a fallacy is distracting from the merits of an argument, then it should be called out. But if calling out a fallacy itself creates a distraction, then calling it out is no better than the fallacy. — James Riley
This leads me to make a troubling discovery, and that discovery is the overuse of ideals such as, ‘You’re too young to understand,’ or ‘You’re too young to hold an opinion on this matter’. This logic is fundamentally flawed, it is no worse than saying that someone is wrong because of their race, marital status, sex etc. — Bradaction
As one of the people who made this kind of statement to you, I'll respond. To be clear, I gave specific reasons for my disagreements with you about gender orientation which did not include any reference to anything personal about you. It's true, I did make this statement:
You're really young. Perhaps if you had a better understanding of what gay people have had to go through to get where they are today, it would give you a better perspective.
I'll stand behind this statement. The things you wrote in that discussion showed a lack of perspective. — T Clark
In short, adult reasoning works for a child when tailored/translated for a child and not otherwise. — tim wood
It retrospect at the intended meaning of your statement perhaps I misinterpreted what you had written, as I had interpreted the 'you're really young' as an added phrase and not as a premise, and I am going to go back and re-discover my new position on your comment. — Bradaction
I understand this, but what about circumstances when the reasoning is denied simply because the creator is a child, regardless of how logical said reasoning is? — Bradaction
It does have one supporting feature the other's lack. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effectThis leads me to make a troubling discovery, and that discovery is the overuse of ideals such as, ‘You’re too young to understand,’ or ‘You’re too young to hold an opinion on this matter’. This logic is fundamentally flawed, it is no worse than saying that someone is wrong because of their race, marital status, sex etc. — Bradaction
Age isn't a literal position, but rather a statement regarding the amount of information — Cheshire
You're really young. Perhaps if you had a better understanding of what gay people have had to go through to get where they are today, it would give you a better perspective. — T Clark
Actually, this is non sequitur. I think you can find it. Technically 2 of them.But I would disagree with the sentiment that age = amount of information. A person that died in 1856 have no knowledge of how WWII ended, yet a 10 year old that has watched or been taught anything about WWII would. Thus in this case the child has a larger amount of information then someone that is several centuries older. — Bradaction
Yes.If an omniscience child were to suddenly appear in the world, would that child's view be rejected simply because they are a child. — Bradaction
I agree.If the question is information instead of age, then the statement should be, 'you lack the information to understand,' instead of 'you're too young to understand.' — Bradaction
If at fifteen he's trying seriously to persuade his parents to buy a keg of beer for him and his junior high school buddies at a party, then his reasoning doesn't matter. — tim wood
Actually, this a non sequitur. I think you can find it. Technically 2 of them. — Cheshire
If an omniscience child were to suddenly appear in the world, would that child's view be rejected simply because they are a child.
— Bradaction
Yes. — Cheshire
Is Argumentum Ad Aetatem a concerning fallacy, and if so, how do we combat its widespread usage? — Bradaction
This leads me to make a troubling discovery, and that discovery is the overuse of ideals such as, ‘You’re too young to understand,’ — Bradaction
And age is also a statement regarding one's legal status, and everything that comes with that.Age isn't a literal position, but rather a statement regarding the amount of information one has available. — Cheshire
Sometimes we are too young to understand. I had this argument used on me by my parents a few times when young. It did not bother me. I understood that I lacked capacity to understand at the time, which was completely true.
Example: I asked why I couldn't accept a lift from a stranger. I didn't understand what my parents meant by potential danger or comprehend why someone might present risks to my safety. What did cut through was when my mum said as an adult she understood some risks I didn't understand and that she wanted me to follow direction until I was older enough to understand the issues. Made sense to me. Experience is a significant factor in understanding and even in having capacity to understand and reasoned argument sometimes falls flat or introduces other problems. — Tom Storm
Simply saying 'because i said so' does not foster good relationships between people, and is fallacious. — Bradaction
I do realise that naming fallacies can be lazy way of avoiding having to counter arguments, this is why I still suggest explaining why a particular argument is fallacious — Bradaction
This part:You're not agreeing. I had a bad relationship with my parents. — Tom Storm
suggests that that particular conversation took place in an atmosphere of trust, even if it was just temporary.What did cut through was when my mum said as an adult she understood some risks I didn't understand and that she wanted me to follow direction until I was older enough to understand the issues. Made sense to me. — Tom Storm
Yes, but, to be fair, you dropped responding to the points raised in your misgendering thread and opened a new one instead trying to name the fallacy you perceived as being in use there. It's not exactly leading by example is it? — Isaac
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