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The Art of Being Right

The perfect guide to spotting bullshit, avoiding cheap tricks and winning arguments

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available

A classic guide to tricks and tactics for winning arguments, with commentary on the use of and defence against each tactic. The best summary of this book is 'being right doesn't mean you're gonna win, and this is why'. It's the ultimate guide to spotting the many different kinds of bullshit people pull in order to win over the crowd, rather than argue the point at hand. There's very few of them that don't immediately bring examples to mind, and having it laid out clearly like this is the perfect armour to stop people derailing you. In the real world, people don't win arguments based on what's correct. They win because they win over the crowd, or change the subject, or bully their rival, or 35 other causes. This guide will walk you through the various strategies that people use, with notes on usage and defence for each point. Arthur didn't intend this work as a guide for winning fights. Much like Machiavelli's The Prince, this is a satire—a guide on what to watch out for in others and yourself, not a toolkit. If you can't win your argument on fair grounds, you need to reconsider your position; but that doesn't mean you should let people steal the day by underhand means. This book will teach you how to spot and spike them before they get a head of steam.


Publisher: Author's Republic Edition: Unabridged

OverDrive Listen audiobook

  • ISBN: 9781982742270
  • File size: 72505 KB
  • Release date: March 1, 2019
  • Duration: 02:31:02

0 of 1 copy available

Formats

OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

English

A classic guide to tricks and tactics for winning arguments, with commentary on the use of and defence against each tactic. The best summary of this book is 'being right doesn't mean you're gonna win, and this is why'. It's the ultimate guide to spotting the many different kinds of bullshit people pull in order to win over the crowd, rather than argue the point at hand. There's very few of them that don't immediately bring examples to mind, and having it laid out clearly like this is the perfect armour to stop people derailing you. In the real world, people don't win arguments based on what's correct. They win because they win over the crowd, or change the subject, or bully their rival, or 35 other causes. This guide will walk you through the various strategies that people use, with notes on usage and defence for each point. Arthur didn't intend this work as a guide for winning fights. Much like Machiavelli's The Prince, this is a satire—a guide on what to watch out for in others and yourself, not a toolkit. If you can't win your argument on fair grounds, you need to reconsider your position; but that doesn't mean you should let people steal the day by underhand means. This book will teach you how to spot and spike them before they get a head of steam.



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