List  of Improper Debating Tactics, AVOID THESE.
 
- Ad hominem. Latin for "at the man".  This is a debating tactic that attacks the arguer and not the argument.  PLEASE, debate the words that people post, not your idea ABOUT the  person that posts. e.g., "member x is a liberal so his objections to the  Iraqi war will obviously be unfounded," or ,"member x is a  conservative, so he is obviously a warmonger". More directly, "Mr. Smith  is an imbecile, therefore all of his arguments are false."
 
- Argument from Authority. This is  the fallacy that states: If an authority says something, it is obviously  true, and it does not need to be evaluated on it's merits. e.g.  (Re-elect nixon because he has a secret plan to end the war in SE Asia.)  Since there is no way to evaluate this plan, there is no way to debate  this. Additionally, "because Einstein said it, and he's an expert, it  must be true." 
 
- Argument from adverse consequences.  "X must exist, because if it didn't then how could Y be possible!".  Even though there is no hard evidence, a certain conclusion is thought  to be true because the alternative seems unlikely. e.g. (God must exist,  because the very fact that the world is here, means that someone must  have created it). In this argument, there is no DRIECT evidence, so it  is not provable, or debatable. The converse also falls under this  fallacy, "God must not exist, because we've never seen evidence for  him!"
 
- Appeal to ignorance. The claim that  whatever has not been proved false must be true, and vice versa. "There  is no evidence against the existance of UFOs, so they probably exist."
 
- Special pleading. Often rescues a  proposition in rhetorical or circumstantial trouble. In other words,  stating a fact is true, because no one understands exactly what is going  on.
 
- Begging the question. "We must  institute the death penalty to lower the rate of violent crime!" But is  there any evidence that instigating the death penalty will lower violent  crime? Or, "The stock market fell yesterday because of a technical  adjustment and profit-taking by investors", but is there is any  independent evidence to support such a claim?
 
- Observational selection. Ignoring  the bad in a situation, and only focusing on the good. This happens all  to often in TLR, with the conservatives backing the "infallible Bush",  and the liberals fighting against the "totally failed Bush".  Objectivism...
 
- Misunderstanding statistics, and "small  statistics". Really try and see how polls and statistics can  be skewed. Have they listed the population the statistics have come  from? How were the statistics calculated. Are they meaningful based on  the criteria used? Have they been bent in any way?
 
- Inconsistency. When one viewpoint  is accepted, but another viewpoint is dismissed simply because it  counteracts the speaker's central perspective: Believing that the  failing life expectancy of Russia is because of the failures of  communism, but NOT believing that the increased infant mortality rate  could be because of the failures of capitalism.
 
- Non sequitur. Latin for "It doesn't follow".  This happens when people have simply ignored alternative possibilities.  Or, they have attributed something to an unconfirmed cause. Most  commonly, a conclusion is stated that does not follow from the argument  given to support it. "Because pollution is becoming more of a problem in  cities, and the air quality is decreasing, people are becoming poorer."
 
- Post hoc, ergo propter hoc. Latin for, "It  happened after, so it was caused by". This fallacy assumes  that because something occured at the same time, or before, it was the  cause of. e.g. "because she took contraceptive pills a few years ago,  she now looks like she is 20 years older than her age. There is no proof  of that, or even data to support the claim. Or, "before women could  vote, there were no nuclear weapons." This second example, is also an  example of a "non-sequitur".
 
- Excluded middle, or false dichotomy.  considering only the extremes of a situation, "Since you don't support  the war on Iraq, you obviously hate America" or "Since you support the  war on Iraq, you're obviously a racist."
 
- Slippery slope. The idea that one  action will lead to a secondary effect that is not a direct cause of the  original action. "If we allow abortion in the first weeks of pregnancy,  it will be impossible to stop abortions of full-term infants", or, "The  state should allow abortion in even the ninth month because otherwise,  they will be telling us what we can't do around the time of conception."  Both suggested changes are effects of an effect. There is no reason to  believe either conclusion.
 
- Confusing correlation and casusation.  The assumption that because variable A is present in the same situation  as variable B, A MUST be the cause of A. Really, there is no mechanism  for how A causes B, so it's not causative. "A survey shows that more  college graduates are homosexual than those that do not have degrees,  therefore education makes you homosexual."
 
- Straw man tactics. Making a  caricature out of a position in order to make it easier to attack. This  is when people Assume they know someone's point of view, and begin  arguing a made-up construction about their opponent, rather than just  debate the words of their opponent. In short, you assume that your  opponent believes something that he or she did not explicitly state.
 
- Suppressed evidence, and half-truths.  This is pretty self-explanatory. Don't post half-truths and propaganda  and expect us to believe them.
 
- Weasal words. The re-labeling of a  certain tactic or fact, in order to make it seem tacit, or  uninteresting. "The president may not declare war without the consent of  congress, but as long as it's called a "police action" and not a war  then it's fine."
 
I hope that people will use this list when they debate here. Let's try  and actually learn something through discussion rather than just arguing  pointlessly. Hopefully these tools will help us to cut through the  garbage.
 
A  Recipe For Reasoned Thought. DO THIS!
 
- Wherever possible, there should be independent confirmation of  "Facts". Look for conflicting data, and accept such data at face value.  All the data should be used to formulate your viewpoint, not just the  data that suits your viewpoint.
 
- Encourage debate on the information from all points of view,  neither pre-judging, or belittling any view you don't agree with.
 
- Arguments from "Authorities" carry little weight. Listen to only  the facts presented by them and evaluate their logic yourself.  Authorities are useful, though, as a starting point to begin to explore a  certain field of study.
 
- Always forge more than one hypothesis. If there is something to be  explained, think of all the different ways it could be explained. Then,  find ways to disprove those hypotheses. Generally, you will always end  up with multiple working hypothesis, even if you don't agree with all of  them.
 
- Try not to get attached to a hypothesis because it's yours, or  because you feel strongly about it. Compare it fairly, and objectively  with the alternative hypotheses. Always try and finds reasons why your  hypothesis could be wrong. Build as much evidence against it before you  trust it.
 
- Quantify. If you can find quantitative measurements for what you  are trying to prove, then use that information to weigh competing points  of view and to support/modify your own viewpoint. Qualitative data is  up for interpretation, but be steadfast and weigh each interpretation  carefully.
 
- If there is a chain of logic that forms an argument, every chain in  the argument must be rigorous, with no weak links.
 
- See if your hypothesis can be falsified. Viewpoints which are  unverifiable are less meaningful than those that are. If your hypothesis  can be falsified, grant that it may not be true pending more  information.