Demagogy Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- For the discussion of political demagoguery and associated methods of gaining political power see the article "Populism".
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2 Methods of demagogy
2.1 Methods not involving violations of logic
3 Sources2.2 Methods involving violation of logic 2.3 Arguments unrelated to a discussion |
The word is derived from Greek demos (people) and agogos (leading).
Numerical demagogy - mixing of incomparable quantities. For example, "our government has increased social spending by 5 billion dollars, while the previous government has increased it only by 0.4 percent." Obviously, the latter sounds like less, but one cannot be sure without an absolute value.
False authority - relying on the general authority of a person who is not proficient in the discussed topic. Example: "the professor read my book, and liked it very much". The fact that it was a professor of chemistry who read a book on anthropology is omitted.
For or against (bifurcation) - assuming that there are only two possible opinions on a given topic. Example: "Smith is not with us, therefore he is against us", "You are either with us or with the terrorists". The possibility of a neutral position or divergence is ignored.
Unrelated facts - bringing unrelated facts that sound in favor of the speaker's agenda. Example: "Our beverages do not contain sodium deoxycholate". This is probably true, but the mentioned chemical is a detergent, and should not be contained in any beverage whatsoever.
Emotional attack - an attempt to bring a discussion to an emotional level. For example, "Everyone is against me!", "Can't I be right just once?", "You are stupid!", "You are demagoguing!".
This is an Article on Demagogy. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Demagogy Etymology
Methods of demagogy
Methods not involving violations of logic
Methods involving violation of logic
Arguments unrelated to a discussion
Sources
