Facts don't matter when it comes to persuasion. We just want them to matter.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @krassenstein
i read your book and I liked it, but I can‘t see how lying to persuade is doing anybody any good.
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Replying to @andy_lavicka @krassenstein
Depends what one is persuading toward. Persuasion is a tool. If you use hyperbole to get to a greater good, everyone wins.
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Like starting/perpetrating a conspiracy theory you know to be slightly untrue as long as it's noble end justifies it means? Isn't that what you Periscoped the other day?
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I compare benefits to costs. What do you do?
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Not being glib here (I know it's hard to tell on Twitter) but promoting a conspiracy theory you know to be untrue for (what you perceive to be) the greater good; isn't that just the definition of 'propaganda'?
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Therein lies the problem, no? A propagandist will justify their subjective actions as a means to a better world, as they perceive it. Don't you think the Fourth Reich sought an eventual end to war, poverty & hunger as *they* saw it (via propaganda)?
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The alternatives to doing what you think is right are a) Doing what you think is wrong, and b) Doing nothing. Which path is best for society?
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Surely the Fourth Reich choosing option b) would've been the best path for society, no?
2 replies 0 retweets 1 likeThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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