Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Schrodinger _ Schrodinger's Cat

Schrodinger _ Schrodinger's Cat

Give a few examples of sophistry or relativism.

Give a few examples of sophistry or relativism.

Hello, if you want to know the examples of sophistry or relativism, you must know what sophistry and relativism are.

Sophistication is actually specious reasoning and argumentation that violates logical laws.

For example, fortune tellers often stretch out a finger to deceive people when telling fortune.

Three candidates asked him, "I heard that your fortune-telling is very accurate." Can you figure out whether the three of us have been admitted to the university? "

So the fortune teller stretched out a finger and said, "Give me money!" " "I did the math!" . As a result, three people answered anyway.

Lost to a fortune teller. One of the three said that none of us had been admitted to the university. The fortune teller said, am I right? One hand.

No one was admitted to the university. The shorter of the three said, "We lied to you, and the two of them were admitted to the university."

..... How? "The fortune teller said that I was right!" One finger means that one person didn't go to college and two people did.

University. Sophistication always creates false connections between irrelevant phenomena, thus confusing right and wrong and reversing black and white.

Relativism is a view that there is no absolute right or wrong because of different positions and conditions.

A scholar was refused access to the abbot. Two days later, a county magistrate came here and the abbot went to meet him. After that, scholars

Ask the abbot? Why do you prefer one of them? Answer: No entertainment, just entertainment. If I entertain you, I will not entertain you. Scholar, after listening to this. wave

Punched the abbot. The abbot asked him why he hit me. The scholar said that if you fight, you won't fight. Fight or not. This is relativism.

There is no absolute view of right and wrong,

Maturity is never wrong.