Uncategorized · September 7, 2007
2 Comments

Another reason to avoid fisking

A little while ago, I indul­gently fisked an idiot com­menter at the Guard­ian, and in doing so out­lined my reluct­ance to resort to such tactics:

I try to avoid fisk­ing because it makes me feel nit-​​picky; I’d rather address the sub­stance of someone’s argu­ment or pos­i­tion, than hope that knock­ing enough little holes in it will have the same effect.

The other thing I should have said, of course, is that it’s basic­ally an argu­ment of the gaps. That is, shred­ding someone else’s pos­i­tion doesn’t neces­sar­ily make me right; why waste time show­ing the flaws in someone else’s argu­ment, when I could be explain­ing and pro­mot­ing my own position?

Aside from the obvi­ous reas­ons above, Deni­al­ism has repor­ted on some new research that intro­duces an inter­est­ing angle. The research isn’t dir­ectly about the prac­tice of fisk­ing, but it applies, I think:

When Uni­ver­sity of Michigan social psy­cho­lo­gist Norbert Schwarz had volun­teers read the CDC flier, how­ever, he found that within 30 minutes, older people mis­re­membered 28 per­cent of the false state­ments as true. Three days later, they remembered 40 per­cent of the myths as factual.

Younger people did bet­ter at first, but three days later they made as many errors as older people did after 30 minutes. Most troub­ling was that people of all ages now felt that the source of their false beliefs was the respec­ted CDC.

So, all those rational blogs out there, whenever they quote old crank canards, in order to shred them in the next para­graph, might actu­ally be re-​​enforcing belief in those lies in their tar­get audi­ence? That’s a pretty big deal if it’s true, and it might force a lot of blog­gers to change the whole way they present their arguments.

Of course, the research is not widely applic­able; it deals spe­cific­ally with widely held, and often repeated myths, rather than the sort of totally out-​​there crankery that occa­sion­ally sur­faces on the inter­net. So, I’d guess we’re still fine to quote some crank claim­ing that we all go through a bal­loon animal phase dur­ing early devel­op­ment, but we might want to think twice when we’re oppos­ing some other crank arguing that Dar­win­ism leads to Nazism, or that the Amer­ican found­ing fath­ers were all prac­tising, main­stream Christians.

It’s worth bear­ing in mind, at any rate.

Comments

2 Responses to “Another reason to avoid fisking”
  1. bug_girl says:

    My con­cern about blog­ging crank ideas is link­ing to their sites – and hence increas­ing their google rank.

  2. Will says:

    Yeah — that’s a really big deal. And, of course, it’s not solved by refus­ing to link to them either. If you even talk about these people, there’s always someone who’ll go and google them dir­ectly, which also increases their rank.

    It’s dif­fi­cult to know the right answer; you can’t let these bozos go unchal­lenged, but you don’t want to draw atten­tion to them either.

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