Analogy: sign of cognitive dissonance
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @AdamLenter
That seems to be your go to when someone makes a sensible argument that involves a common practice in the English language
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Replying to @benbreckenridge @AdamLenter
Irrationality (via analogy) is a common practice. Is that your argument?
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @AdamLenter
Scott, I'm a fan and an avid reader. I like hearing your thoughts, but sometimes it seems like you ignore facts and resort to ycogdis attack
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Replying to @benbreckenridge @AdamLenter
You might have missed this blog post: http://bit.ly/2qJpdEM
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Then you need a refresher.
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I've read everything Scott has written for the past year now. He has some brilliant ideas and some idiotic ideas, but I'm not blinded.
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Name an "idiotic" idea, please?
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Replying to @Axension @benbreckenridge and
I would describe this paragraph from Adams as wrong, or perhaps "idiotic".pic.twitter.com/P1ir75g0d9
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And if you did, that would be a sign of cognitive dissonance. (Insult without reason.)
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @Axension and
My "insult" is identifying that Trump 'ignores the things that don't matter' is wrong (subjective claim). Examples via Tweets. Claim=idiotic
0 replies 0 retweets 1 likeThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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