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Complex questions seem more like debaters' tricks than like
arguments. When used as a debater's trick, the idea is that, since a
complex question cannot be answered (as asked), the opponent is left
speechless and stammering A complex question qualifies as an argument - and
therefore as a fallacious argument - only because some conclusion is
drawn from the opponent's inability to answer the question. In most cases
this conclusion is left unstated (except, perhaps, in the minds of
listeners). Discussion of issues sometimes takes place in the context of a
Socratic dialog. One of the participants in the dialog asks questions aimed
at discovering what positions the other is willing to endorse. Usually the
purpose of the discussion (for the questioner) is to show the other person
that some view he is attempting to defend is inconsistent with some other
view that the discussants have agreed upon. For example, in Plato's
Gorgias, an Athenian politician named Callicles tries to defend the view
that certain powerful individuals (by which he means himself) have a perfect
moral right to do as they please without being bound by the false
"conventional" morality of the masses. Socrates asks, "Are not the mass of
men naturally stronger than the individual man?" Callicles admits that they
are. But then, on the principle that the true morality is the morality of
the powerful, it follows that the "conventional" morality of the masses
is the true morality. Isn't that what follows? "Don't grudge me an
answer to this question, Callicles," says Socrates. Unable to answer the
question without admitting that he was wrong, Callicles remains silent, and
we all know that his view has been refuted. This is an example of legitimate
questioning used to expose the falsity of a position. The fallacy of Complex
Question mimics such Socratic questioning, but the question that renders the
opponent speechless is unanswerable, not because the opponent has been
trapped in a contradiction, but because the question itself is confused or
misdirected. The ploy succeeds when the audience fails to notice the
difference. |