The following argument contains over a
dozen fallacies. Identify 7 of them, listed A - G. For
each, write/copy the phrase(s) involved, and then name the fallacy &/or
explain why it is a problem. Note that some statements may commit more than one
mistake, so the phrase could be used more than once.
The feminist argument that
pornography is harmful has no merit and should not be discussed in college
courses. I read “Playboy” magazine, and I don’t see how it could be harmful.
Feminists might criticize me for looking at porn, but they shouldn’t talk; they
obviously look at it, too, or they couldn’t criticize it. Many important
people, including the Presidents, writers, and entertainers who have been
interviewed by the magazine and the women who pose in it, apparently agree.
Scientific studies so far have not proved that pornography is harmful, so it
must not be harmful. Besides, to be harmful, pornography would either have to
harm the men who read it or the women who pose in it, and since they both
choose these activities, they must not be harmful. Feminists should take a
lesson from my parents—they don’t like loud music and won’t have it in their
house, but they don’t go around saying it’s harmful to everyone or trying to
prevent others from listening to it. Ever since feminists began attacking our
popular culture, the moral foundation of our society has been weakened; the
divorce rate, for example, continues to rise. If feminists would just cease
their hysterical opposition to sex, perhaps relationships in our society would
improve. If feminists insist, instead, on banning porn, men will have no
freedom and no pleasure left, and large numbers of women will be jobless and
will have to work as prostitutes to support themselves. In light of these
consequences, feminists shouldn’t be surprised if their protests are met with
violence. Truly, the feminist argument is baseless.
Question
2 (20
points)
Assess the strengths and weaknesses of the
following argument, which is a better attempt on the same topic as above. How
well has this author defended the conclusion? Explain your answer, using
any of the strategies we have studied this term.
The feminist
argument that pornography is harmful lacks adequate support. First, the
feminist argument typically alleges that pornography increases men’s
willingness to rape women, or at least to think of them only as sex objects.
But this argument ignores the fact that the print pornography industry alone
earns more money each year than the entire “legitimate” bookselling industry.
For that to be true, there must be many, many men and women who read
pornography regularly. And yet crime statistics suggest that not many men rape
women. […] Feminists have [also] often argued that the porn industry is harmful
to the women who work within it—that many of them are abused and exploited. I
agree with them that if an industry is mistreating people, it needs to be
reformed, and they are doing a public service by pointing out such abuses. But
what sort of reform are feminists proposing? One suggestion has
been made by Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin, who argue that there
should be a civil rights statute that allows anyone who has been harmed by porn
to seek civil damages from pornographers. My concern about this proposal is
that although it will not legally be censorship, since the law would not
empower the government to stop anyone from producing material based on the
ideas it contains, the civil rights statute will have the same effect as
censorship. Pornographers may be so afraid of facing lawsuits that many of them
will stop producing porn—and a situation where people are afraid to put forward
certain kinds of writing or pictures because they will face legal consequences
seems to violate the spirit, if not the letter, of Charter protections for free
speech. Porn, like books, may express certain ideas about men, women, and sex,
and those ideas may have political ramifications—but just as controversial
books are protected, porn should be. It may even do more good than harm by
provoking thoughtful discussion and debate about men, women, and
sexuality.
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