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SPEAKER: Red herring is another well-known fallacy type,
but it's easily confused with straw figure.
So here, I want to highlight the differences between the two.
The name "red herring" comes from an old method of training
dogs for fox hunting.
The goal is a train the dogs to follow the fox's scent,
even if the dogs encounter other smells that
are potentially distracting.
So what they do is they got the fox go so the fox leaves
a scent trail.
Then before letting the dogs go, they
drag a bunch of smelly red herrings
across the fox's trail, like this.
Then they release the dogs.
When the dogs hit the herring trail,
they'll be distracted by the smell,
and some will be inclined to follow
the herring trail instead.
So the trainers try to get the dogs to stay on the fox trail
and resist the urge to follow the herring.
So what's what with this metaphor?
Well, the fox is some argument-- the original argument
that is at issue in a debate.
The dog can represent anyone who is interested and engaged
in this argument.
The red herring is something that
distracts you from following the trail of the original argument.
It might be a new and different argument
that raises a different issue or simply
an irrelevant comment that distracts from the main issue.
What's important is that it's distracting enough
to make the audience want to follow this new trail away
from the original argument and the main issue.
So putting all this together, you commit the red herring
fallacy when in an argument you divert attention
away from the main issue or the main line of argumentation
by introducing something that changes the subject, that
raises a new issue that isn't relevant to the proceeding
line of discussion.
The fallacy really occurs when you then conclude something
from this different issue or presume
that some conclusion has been established
and use this to claim that you've won the argument
or said something relevant about the original argument.
In this respect, the fallacy is very much like a straw figure
fallacy in that you are mistakenly or misleadingly
saying that you've won an argument
or refuted an argument when all that you've really done
is avoid engaging the original argument.
But it's different from the straw figure fallacy
in that a straw figure involves distorting or misrepresenting
some original argument and then knocking down the distorted
argument.
In a red herring, the arguer ignores the opponent's argument
and subtly changes the subject.
So to distinguish between the two,
you need to ask yourself whether the arguer has knocked down
a distorted argument or simply changed the subject.
Here is a summary of the points just made.
To illustrate the difference, consider this.
I overheard my friend John argue that the Bible has
errors in it.
Funny, I never figured him for an atheist.
This is a straw figure, not a red herring
since the conclusion being drawn is related to the main argument
that his friend is making about the Bible.
But it's clearly working off of a distorted or exaggerated
version of it if it equates Biblical fallibilism
with atheism.
Now compare that to this one.
My opponent has argued that there's an urgent need
to reduce greenhouse gases in order
to minimize global warming.
But the most serious problem facing future generations
is the risk posed by nuclear weapons in the hands
of rogue states and terrorists.
This is where we need to focus our attention and resources.
This is a red herring.
The original issue was about greenhouse gases
and the urgency of global warming.
This response sidesteps that issue
and introduces a new issue.
To avoid committing a red herring,
the arguer would need to show the global warming isn't
an urgent problem or that reducing greenhouse gas
emissions won't be effective in reducing it--
or something like that.
Nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists
is certainly a serious issue, but that fact
is nothing to undermine the original argument
about global warming.