Not really, no. I go by the usual meaning, which implies a lack of lies and dissimulation, but does not imply that only reasonable statements are in good faith. The word 'faith' is not synonym of the word 'reason'. It's more an antonym in fact. Sometimes it is rational to lie. but one cannot lie in good faith. — Olivier5
It is generally assumed an effective translation of the Latin bona fides, which is about reliability and trust between two parties in their dealings towards each other. — Benkei
the usual meaning, which implies a lack of lies and dissimulation — Olivier5
A few pointers and indicators about people arguing in bad faith:
1. No data is good enough for them, except theirs. They are likely to disregard entire sciences and throw away vast amount of data just because they can (or must).
2. On the other hand, they choose to trust and accept uncritically any data that seems to buttress their view, without ever wondering if it's genuine or manipulative. They are eager to believe alternative views and that makes them easy to manipulate.
3. They misinterpret even their own data, like when you pretended to confuse an in vitro finding with an in vivo conclusion. This is done on purpose and is part of the lying.
4. They tend to essentialize their opponents, at least in their rhetoric. Whether it's the Jews, climate scientists, politicians, the CIA or the medical establishment, they pretend to believe that their (invented) enemies -- all of them or nearly all of them -- are essentially, fundamentally evil and will always remain so.
5. From 4, it follows that they see no solution. They will criticize any proposal or policy around, but can't propose anything cogent themselves. It's about denial and negativity, about lying and poisoning the well of knowledge for others, not about proposing new knowledge or constructively moving forward. — Olivier5
it is wildly irresponsible for a leader to publicly declare a culprit, on no other ground than that he has some kind of 'gut feeling' it was them. — Isaac
Shall we have a look at the furores kicked up when people suggested America blew up the gas pipeline?
What about the backlash you yourself take part in at the mere mention of US involvement in Maidan?
The slightest suggestion of a back door negotiation recently brought a scathing rebuke.
Why don't you find a French translation and share it here? — Benkei
I already mentioned to Christoffer that in the context of that small speech it's quite clear what he means. — Benkei
After all, send a large NATO coalition to carpet bomb the Russian military, then the war would be over. — Manuel
Besides, if they did, then that'd likely end up worse for Russia(ns) anyway. — comment · Nov 17, 2022
out of arguments and back at ad hominems I see, how novel. It's obvious for anyone who can read using the common sense meaning of words in the English language. — Benkei
...and then the irony of you trying to prove why your interpretation is correct by prompting that those non-native English speakers you argue with would "clearly understand" in the way you do if they had only understood the English language better. Almost kind of racist in a way of an Ad Hominem now is it? — Christoffer
Can some other mod please enlighten me on why Benkei is still a mod on this forum? It's like a judge who's breaking the law — Christoffer
I'm guessing NATO/whoever aren't doing much because of unpredictability, risk, that stuff. A no-fly zone still wouldn't force Putin to start nuking, though. — jorndoe
because you were attacking him personally rather than his argument. — Baden
His retort wasn't racist in any way (he's a non-native speaker himself and being a non-native speaker isn't a race anyhow). — Baden
Note that Zelensky is not a native speaker either, so arguably Chris and I understand him better than any of you natives. — Olivier5
The consequent here "pointing out someone is wrong because they're a non-native speaker" has more than the one antecedent given in your example. i.e. A racist could make that comment and a non-racist could make it too. — Baden
A racist could make that comment and a non-racist could make it too. — Baden
The reason for the act makes the racist in this case. There are lots of acts like that. — Baden
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