Whataboutisms: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Informal Logic 43 (1):91-112 (2023)
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Abstract

The rhetorical function of whataboutism is to redirect attention from the specific case at hand. Although commonly used as a rhetorical move, whataboutisms can appear in arguments. These tend to be weak arguments and are often instances of the tu quoque fallacy or other fallacies of relevance. In what follows, I show that arguments involving a whataboutist move can take a wide variety of forms, and in some cases, they can occur in good arguments. I end by considering how whataboutist arguing in social justice contexts can be harmful to arguers and to the audiences for their arguments.

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What about Whataboutism?Scott Aikin & John Casey - forthcoming - Social Epistemology.

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