When two people you are friends with get into an argument with each other, and they both want you to believe their side of the story.
Hey, Dave and Kate broke up. Yeah, they both messaged me about it and I don’t know who to believe. I’m in a bit of an Argument Sandwich right now man.
by EliasCoyote May 3, 2024
Get the Argument Sandwich mug.The specific inability to perceive the weaknesses, missing premises, or emotional core of your own argument. You experience it as a solid, seamless edifice, while viewing opposing arguments as fragile houses of cards. This blind spot makes you confused and angry when others aren't instantly persuaded, because to you, your case seems invulnerable. You've literally never seen its flaws.
Example: "He couldn't understand why no one was convinced by his argument. His argument blind spot hid the fact his entire case rested on a single, uncited statistic he'd heard on a podcast, and that his tone was dripping with condescension. He saw a steel trap of logic; everyone else saw a wet paper bag of arrogance."
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
Get the Argument Blind Spot mug.Manufacturing a complete argument from whole cloth, including fabricated evidence, invented experts, or fake citations. This is the creation of a persuasive narrative with no connection to reality, designed to be deployed as a ready-made rhetorical weapon. It's counterfeiting an entire case file for a trial that will never see a real judge.
Example: "She forged an argument against the development by citing a 'landmark study from the MIT Urban Planning Journal' that didn't exist, quoting a 'leading ecologist' she made up, and referencing local aquifer data she'd completely invented. Her argument was a compelling fiction, meticulously fabricated to sway the town council." Argument Forging
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
Get the Argument Forging mug.The skillful assembly of a persuasive argument by artfully selecting, framing, and connecting real (but often cherry-picked or decontextualized) pieces of evidence, appeals, and rhetorical moves. The craft lies in the arrangement and presentation, leading the audience down a specific path of thought while minimizing exposure to contradictory information. It's not making up the bricks, but building a wall that only shows their best side.
Example: "The prosecutor crafted her closing argument like a novelist. She took ambiguous text messages and crafted a story of premeditation, used the defendant's calm demeanor as evidence of a sociopathic lack of remorse, and sequenced the exhibits for maximum emotional narrative. It was less a presentation of facts and more a guided tour through a version of reality she had constructed." Argument Crafting
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
Get the Argument Crafting mug.When an argument is evaluated based on its perceived category, label, or characteristics rather than its actual strength or content. "This is postmodernist, therefore wrong." "This is relativist, therefore dismissible." "This is pseudoscience, therefore false." The fallacy lies in treating the classification as the refutation—as if naming the kind of argument does the work of engaging it. The strength of an argument is independent of what we call it. A relativist argument might be strong; a "scientific" argument might be weak. The label isn't the logic.
Argument to Argument Fallacy "They didn't address a single point of my critique. Just said: 'This is classic postmodern relativism.' That's Argument to Argument Fallacy—the label did the work they were supposed to do. But labeling isn't arguing, and name-calling isn't refutation."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
Get the Argument to Argument Fallacy mug.A specific form of the Debunkist Fallacy where someone argues that a claim must be false because it has been debunked by a particular source, authority, or community. "Snopes debunked it," "Science says it's false," "The consensus rejects it." The fallacy lies in appealing to debunking as authority rather than engaging the evidence. Debunking is a process, not a person; it's a claim, not a proof. Citing that something has been debunked doesn't replace showing why it's wrong. The Argument from Debunking is argument from authority dressed in skeptical clothing.
"I pointed out that some alternative health practices have helped people. Response: 'Snopes debunked that years ago.' That's Argument from Debunking Fallacy—appealing to debunking as authority, not engaging the evidence. Snopes can be wrong; debunking can be incomplete; personal experiences don't disappear because a website says so. Debunking is a tool, not a god. Using it as the final word is just another form of argument from authority, with fact-checkers as the new priests."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
Get the Argument from Debunking Fallacy mug.A rhetorical move where someone argues that their position must be accepted because it is true, with "true" functioning as a self-justifying predicate. The argument is circular: it's true because it's true. The fallacy lies in treating truth as a property that can be asserted rather than demonstrated, as a conclusion rather than a claim. Argument from Truth is the most basic form of dogmatism—truth as mantra, as magic word, as conversation-ender.
"Why should I accept your view? 'Because it's true.' That's Argument from Truth—truth as assertion, not demonstration. But truth isn't a badge you wear; it's a claim you support. Calling your view true doesn't make it so; it just shows you've stopped arguing and started declaring."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
Get the Argument from Truth mug.