Proposal: Is Pedophilia Pseudoscience?

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Well, this sentence is meaningless, as Spidergoat pointed it out in post #2.



What you might trying to say could be:

- pedophilia is not a mental illness
- pedophilia is definition dependent
- the definition of pedophilia is not scientific, (it is age or society dependent)

So which one is it? If it is #3, you might be right, but a law doesn't need to be scientific, it just need to be based on society's concensus.

Also the law's and the DSM's definition of pedophilia can be different. Being gay was classified as a mental illness in the early 70s in the DSM, then society's attitude changed, so did the definition.

It's not important whether or not US law does or doesn't care if they are scientific. In terms of this issue, my position is to prove they don't hold themselves to the highest standards (those of science).

Definitional difference between the US law and the DSM is irrelevant. It is not necessary to have consistent definitions between entities (in this case the US law and DSM) for a person to find them both to be pseudo-scientific.

As far as your choices go, they don't cover my position in general. In light of of your comments, I'll try to be more specific:

Pedophilia as defined and used by US law and the DSM is pseudo-scientific.
 
I think what ancientregime is saying is that pedophilia/paedophilia is not a mental illness if simply defined as attraction to minors. Am I right ancientregime?
 
If we have to untangle to opponents argument to ensure we understand them, we are doing the work of putting it into a clear deductive form (syllogism) for them. This is not the responsibility of the opponent. A deductive from will be necessary anyway. I say we get it out of the way with the use of syllogisms.

I will not agree to debate you if my posts are to be judged and restricted to some 3-statement strict syllogistic format, because I am worried the debate will become more about format than the actual topic. I warrant that if I debate you my arguments will be logical nonetheless. If they are not, then you can use that as a point against me in the debate - just as I can for you.

A statement representing the general argument, through the use of the word "disorder" it implies the inclusion of the psychiatric definition, but excludes the criminal aspect. I would like to included the criminal aspect.

In light of this, I would rephrase the topic to be:

Pedophilia is not a crime or mental illness.

How about "Defining pedophilia as a crime or mental illness is pseudoscientific?"

Actually, I'm not too worried about the exact wording of the topic. Debaters' understanding of the topic can be hashed out in the debate itself. I would agree to "Pedophilia is pseudoscience", if that's what you want.

I would also like to suggest three more rules extending from the standard rules: Time Extension, Stipulation Argument, and a Judge.

I agree to your time extension rule. I suggest that requests for time extensions (if any) be made and agreed to in the Discussion thread for the debate, to keep the debate thread clean.

I think your stipulation argument rule is unnecessary, but will agree to it if that is what you want.

But if we cannot agree on a definition during a stipulation argument, then what? The judge decides?

I agree to scott3x being the judge, if a judge becomes necessary.

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In summary, I agree to your conditions, apart from the restriction of arguments to strict syllogisms. If you can agree to drop that requirement, I invite you to open the Debate and Discussion threads and we can begin. You, as proposer of the debate, go first.

I assume the debate will be according to Standard Rules, other than the additional rules you have suggested.
 
I will not agree to debate you if my posts are to be judged and restricted to some 3-statement strict syllogistic format, because I am worried the debate will become more about format than the actual topic. I warrant that if I debate you my arguments will be logical nonetheless. If they are not, then you can use that as a point against me in the debate - just as I can for you.

If you refuse to use a syllogism then I will have to request some other formality. There has to be some structure for things to be considered formal. What do you think about this:


Arguments will be formed with paragraphs. Paragraphs consist of sentences. Sentences are of two types: premises and conclusions. Each paragraph may contain any number of sentences. Each sentence must be a premise, except the last sentence of a paragraph. The last sentence of a paragraph must always be a conclusion. A conclusion must never appear anywhere else in a paragraph except the last sentence.

Each concluding sentence of each paragraph must provide support for your overall argument.
 
I agree to scott3x being the judge, if a judge becomes necessary.

Woot :). ancientregime, I must make one point that I didn't before, possibly because I wasn't sure that James would even accept a judge of any sort; from what I understand, James is the head of sciforums. As such, even if I am called in to judge something in the debate between you and James, I would still consider it as a type of 'lower court' judge, one that can be overturned rather swiftly; It is my understand that, in sciforums atleast, James has the ability to pull the plug on the forum entirely and so any judgements against something he believes him can truly only be made with his consent.

For my part, I can disagree and even be miffed when decisions are made that I don't have control over, but I've had 2 forums myself (both fairly small though) and when push comes to shove, there really can only be one head as far as I'm concerned.
 
If you refuse to use a syllogism then I will have to request some other formality. There has to be some structure for things to be considered formal. What do you think about this:


Arguments will be formed with paragraphs. Paragraphs consist of sentences. Sentences are of two types: premises and conclusions. Each paragraph may contain any number of sentences. Each sentence must be a premise, except the last sentence of a paragraph. The last sentence of a paragraph must always be a conclusion. A conclusion must never appear anywhere else in a paragraph except the last sentence.

Each concluding sentence of each paragraph must provide support for your overall argument.

I'm not James, but I personally find that the above conditions may be a bit too strict. As a matter of fact, I find debating rules in general to be fairly stultifying at times which I think is part of the reason that I made my last debate as short as possible and quickly moved over to the discussion thread which (I hope) can still keep a certain rule which I cherish above all others while dispending with the rest.

The rule that I think can be a godsend is a rule against certain insults; from my long experience posting, I have found that certain insults can be immensely detrimental to any serious discussion. As soon as one person starts with it, at the very least it tends to discourage the other party from responding, and can lead to a complete paralysis of the thread. At worst, the other party also slides into the muck; at that point, whether it stops or not is almost irrelevant as discussion can become absolutely worthless.

The rest can be helpful in certain contexts, but I prize the 'bar against certain insults' above all others. However, having seen James in various situations, I really don't think that insults is something you have to worry about with him; I find him to be like me, rather light on the insults :). Admittedly, in his case it helps that his views are more 'normal', as sometimes even someone who isn't insulting can deeply offend if their views are unconventional enough.
 
Tentative Rules

I decided to just write up all the rules (tentative at this point pending agreement with a challenger). James (or anyone else that wants to challenge), let me know if you would like to negotiate any changes.

Participants
There will be three participants. One debating the affirmative, one debating the negative, and a Judge for Stipulation Arguments (See Stipulation Argument below).

Argument Format
An entire argument will be formed using paragraphs. Each paragraph is considered a single argument. Paragraphs consist of sentences. Sentences are of two types: premises and conclusions. Each paragraph may contain any number of sentences. Each sentence must be a premise, except the last sentence of a paragraph. The last sentence of a paragraph must always be a conclusion. A conclusion must never appear anywhere else in a paragraph except the last sentence.

It is your duty to ensure the your premises support your conclusion. It is also your duty to ensure the concluding sentence of each paragraph provides support for your overall argument.

Stipulation Argument

A person may demand a Stipulation Argument if they disagree or are confused with the use of a term. The Stipulation Argument may be made only after an opponent posts an argument. Once started, the Stipulation Argument must come to an end for the debate to continue. A Stipulation Argument comes to an end one of two ways: both agree on the terms new meaning or an impasse is reached. If an impasse is reached then the Judge decides on the definition of the term in question. The Judge must provide an decision using syllogism.

An example Stipulation Argument:

I'm confused as to what you mean by abuse.



I mean harm occurs.



So, abuse is an act that causes harm?






So would you agree we stipulate that abuse means: an action that causes harm?






Both parties agreed, so the term abuse will be stipulated as: an action that causes harm. If the Stipulation Argument changes the intended meaning of the term abuse in previous argument posts, then both parties may edit their arguments to accommodate the stipulation. These edits must occur before another Stipulation Argument can be made or a rebuttal is made.

Steps of the Debate

An argument is posted. The opponent may: (a) make a stipulation argument(s), then post a rebuttal argument, or (b) just post a rebuttal argument.

This occurs for four turns and the debate ends, unless extra posts are agreed upon.

Additional Rules

A maximum of four posts may be made by each, excluding Stipulation Argument posts. Extra posts may only occur under two conditions: both parties agree to an extra post or the Judge finds it necessary to allow for additional posts. A party should only ask the Judge as a last resort.

The debate will close if a post is not made in two days. A specific extension of days is only allowed if both parties agree.

A word may not fall into Stipulation Argument more than once, unless the judge makes an exception. A debater may request an exception from the Judge.
 
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Woot :). ancientregime, I must make one point that I didn't before, possibly because I wasn't sure that James would even accept a judge of any sort; from what I understand, James is the head of sciforums. As such, even if I am called in to judge something in the debate between you and James, I would still consider it as a type of 'lower court' judge, one that can be overturned rather swiftly; It is my understand that, in sciforums atleast, James has the ability to pull the plug on the forum entirely and so any judgements against something he believes him can truly only be made with his consent.

For my part, I can disagree and even be miffed when decisions are made that I don't have control over, but I've had 2 forums myself (both fairly small though) and when push comes to shove, there really can only be one head as far as I'm concerned.

According to the tentative rules, you would only be making a final decision on the definition of a word if we both cannot come to an agreement. This does carry a lot of authority and can determine the outcome. If you are very biased, you could trap one of us into not being able to make a rational argument (even though there is one possible), resulting in a loss. If you are fair, it will ensure the stronger argument wins.

I feel comfortable with James even if he is the admin. No one else is challenging at this point anyway.
 
I'm not James, but I personally find that the above conditions may be a bit too strict. As a matter of fact, I find debating rules in general to be fairly stultifying at times which I think is part of the reason that I made my last debate as short as possible and quickly moved over to the discussion thread which (I hope) can still keep a certain rule which I cherish above all others while dispending with the rest.

I know syllogisms are stultifying. Informally formatted arguments all must be taken apart and put into a syllogistic format for testing. I don't agree this should be put on the burden of your opponent.

I'm willing to compromise although, because I know it's a very rigorous expectation to state things in the most explicit and logical way possible.

So I made some clear changes.

In syllogism a person must make all their premises connected. I don't have this requirement, although anyone who does not connect their premises should do so with warning that the conclusion may not logically follow or unnecessary information is presented.

I do require all paragraphs have premises, except the last sentence. Premises represent proposals and facts. These facts in consideration all have a consequence when considered together which results in a conclusion. So, I require a conclusion at the end.
 
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scott3x said:
Woot :). ancientregime, I must make one point that I didn't before, possibly because I wasn't sure that James would even accept a judge of any sort; from what I understand, James is the head of sciforums. As such, even if I am called in to judge something in the debate between you and James, I would still consider it as a type of 'lower court' judge, one that can be overturned rather swiftly; It is my understand that, in sciforums atleast, James has the ability to pull the plug on the forum entirely and so any judgements against something he believes him can truly only be made with his consent.

For my part, I can disagree and even be miffed when decisions are made that I don't have control over, but I've had 2 forums myself (both fairly small though) and when push comes to shove, there really can only be one head as far as I'm concerned.

According to the tentative rules, you would only be making a final decision on the definition of a word if we both cannot come to an agreement.

Ah. How interesting. I mention this only because I was just having trouble with someone over the definition of a word (in my case, God). You're right, it can certainly kill a discussion.


ancientregime said:
This does carry a lot of authority and can determine the outcome. If you are very biased, you could trap one of us into not being able to make a rational argument (even though there is one possible), resulting in a loss. If you are fair, it will ensure the stronger argument wins.

I would argue that even if I'm fair and one argument is stronger then the other, it doesn't really guarantee anything in the short term. When it comes to some issues, I believe that society is simply too engrained and it may take a long time indeed before things change.


ancientregime said:
I feel comfortable with James even if he is the admin. No one else is challenging at this point anyway.

True. Honestly, though, I think James would be one of the best people to debate with. He's gentle with his arguments; for someone like me who is rather sensitive to the harsher types of debating, it's a godsend. I've been talking about 9/11 for a while, but other then him saying that it was an immature debate (atleast that was my impression of what he said), he's never really gone further. Which I sometimes think is a shame, but who knows. There are some people who knew people who were killed on 9/11 and if James is one of them or even if it's a subject that's deeply emotioanl for him (something that's not exactly uncommon), it may be actually be fortunate that he's never actually really debated me on it.
 
I know syllogisms are stultifying. Informally formatted arguments all must be taken apart and put into a syllogistic format for testing. I don't agree this should be put on the burden of your opponent.

I'm willing to compromise although, because I know it's a very rigorous expectation to state things in the most explicit and logical way possible.

So I made some clear changes.

In syllogism a person must make all their premises connected. I don't have this requirement, although anyone who does not connect their premises should do so with warning that the conclusion may not logically follow or unnecessary information is presented.

I do require all paragraphs have premises, except the last sentence. Premises represent proposals and facts. These facts in consideration all have a consequence when considered together which results in a conclusion. So, I require a conclusion at the end.

Ok. I assume you've simply done more of this formal debating type of thing than I have. I seem to have managed alright with my perhaps more primitive approach ;-).
 
scott3x said:
ancientregime said:
If you are fair, it will ensure the stronger argument wins.

I would argue that even if I'm fair and one argument is stronger then the other, it doesn't really guarantee anything in the short term.

I don't agree. I demand a Stipulation Argument for the word fair.:D

Laugh :). Fine; from thefreedictionary.com's 8th definition:
Consistent with rules, logic, or ethics: a fair tactic.

Rules are easy enough. What's logical and ethical though; i mean, there's a whole -forum- in sciforums dedicated to ethics and morality and I think that logic is similarly hard to pin down. Put simply, sometimes even brilliant minds make mistakes in mathematical equations. In many ways, I think one could argue that math is pure logic and yet mistakes are still made. Language is by no means pure logic. You rightly realize the importance of the definition of words; but there may be certain definitions of words that James refuses to let go of, just as I have refused to let go of my definition of God. So that's one issue.

The other issue also revolves around language- perhaps it's that every word counts and while both you and James may feel that you mean the same thing when you use various words, it may not, in fact, be true. This, in turn, can cause you to see each other's arguments as mistaken and thus not be able to come to an agreement.

-However-, despite all this, I do believe it's all worth the effort. I believe that with enough discussion on important topics, the truth can be finally revealed to everyone.
 
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