Index of Popular Fallacies
POPULAR FALLACIES
Our experience would
lead us to quite an opposite conclusion. Temper, indeed, is no
test of truth; but warmth and earnestness are a proof at least
of a man's own conviction of the rectitude that which he maintains.
Coolness is as often the result of unprincipled indifference to
truth or falsehood, as of a sober confidence in a man's own side
in a dispute. Nothing is more insulting sometimes than the appearance
of this philosophic temper. There is little Titubus, the stammering
law-stationer in Lincoln's Inn -- we have seldom known this shrewd
little fellow engaged in argument where we were not convinced
he had the best of it, if tongue would but fairly have seconded
him. When he has been spluttering excellent broken sense for an
hour together, writhing and labouring to be delivered of the point
of dispute -- the very [p 257] gist of the controversy
knocking at his teeth, which like some obstinate iron-grating
still obstructed its deliverance -- his puny frame convulsed,
and face reddening all over at an unfairness in the logic which
he wanted articulation to expose, it has moved our gall to see
a smooth portly fellow of an adversary, that cared not a button
for the merits of the question, by merely laying his hand upon
the head of the stationer, and desiring him to he calm (your tall
disputants have always the advantage), with a provoking sneer
carry the argument clean from him in the opinion of all the bystanders,
who have gone away clearly convinced that Titubus must have been
in the wrong, because he was in a passion; and that Mr. -----,
meaning his opponent, is one of the fairest, and at the same time
one of the most dispassionate arguers breathing.