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I think you are trying to be fair, but agree with the people pointing out that going up against a lawyer and experienced podcaster is not a fair fight if you don't have experience in that kind of venue. I mean, I am pretty convinced that the theory of evolution is true and young earth creationism is not, and I think I understand the science well enough to argue that from an educated position, but I am neither a public debater nor a scientist, and if I debated a professional young earth creationist who runs a podcast "debunking" evolution, I expect I'd be made to look like a fool.
There are definitely young earth creationists who would challenge you to a public debate that they then lose. They tend to be on the more total schizo, Robert Sungenis end, and not on the more Ken Ham, add enough epicycles to make the theory work end. But Ken Ham probably doesn’t want to debate you anyways, so you’re probably on even ground accepting a debate invitation to a YEC podcast.
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I don't believe I gained any super powers from being a lawyer, and I reached my positions with access to the exact same resources that anyone else has. But whatever advantages I may have I would assume are mitigated by sharing resources ahead of time and the 1v3 format. I'm open to other suggestions. I also think it's perfectly ok/commendable for people to admit they're incapable of defending their beliefs, but keep in mind that the three I tagged have made confident assertions about my dishonesty and bad faith on this particular topic. Unless someone is making a baseless accusation, I have to assume it's based on some evidence and that they would be eager for an opportunity to establish the validity of their beliefs.
It's not a super power but your setting the domain rules to favor other trained lawyers over people less familiar with legal procedures.
How do the rules favor other trained lawyers, and what changes would you suggest?
It's not a thing you can change by just modifying a few conditions. The only meaningful way to get rid of the advantage of being a trained lawyer is to find an opponent who's also a trained lawyer or equivalent.
This incessant insistence on "if you REALLY were serious, you'd do it at a time and place and under circumstances of my choosing" is as annoying as rationalists insisting "if you REALLY were serious, you'd bet money".
The objection was on the rules themselves, not just that I'm a trained lawyer. I'm trying to separate the earnest objections versus the pretextual excuses from those unwilling to have their beliefs scrutinized. If someone objects to the rules but then offers no alternatives, I have nothing to go off.
Nobody can possibly give an exhaustive list of all the ways in which the rules can advantage a trained lawyer. Asking for them to give a list of rule objections just leads to a situation where they left one out or didn't phrase their objection properly, and you go "Ha ha, well now you admitted in advance the rules are okay, so I can do anything I want that you didn't mention, and you have no reason to complain".
It's just like the situation with rationalist bets, except instead of "you're probably not going to phrase the bet in a way free of loopholes" it's "you're probably not going to phrase your objection to the rules in a way free of loopholes".
I never asked for an exhaustive list, I just want some specifics on why the rules are unfair rather than just proclaiming they're unfair for unspecified reasons. Someone who knows their beliefs will crumble when it encounters a stiff breeze of scrutiny has an incentive to make up whatever excuse to keep them safeguarded, so I need some method to discern who has earnest objections and who's just making shit up.
Let's start with "as a trained debater, you have a higher chance of being able to say things with subtle flaws that your opponent cannot resolve in time".
(And if your response is "fine, I'll do X so that's not a problem," that won't work since it isn't an exhaustive list.)
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To really even things up, would you be willing to suffer some light head trauma?
Just to make things fair here.
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Right. It's like dealing with the Devil. You may not know how you're going to get screwed over. You may be able to look the contract over carefully and not see a catch. But you can be sure there is one and you're going to Hell without getting the full benefit apparently promised, because the Devil's that much better at this game than you are.
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Being a lawyer is not magic.
Nobody here is going to be impressed if @ymeskhout tries to win on a technicality instead of the substance of the issue. Moreover, if he did act in some kind of unreasonable procedural way, it’s going to decrease anyone ever being willing to go on the podcast, which is against his demonstrated preferences.
But you can try to lay the grounds for the excuse that anyone debating an issue with him and doing poorly is because of legal superpowers and not on the merits.
Or you can propose a different format. Or find a lawyer who holds the relevant beliefs I guess.
Debate skills let you win in a good-sounding way, not in a procedural way. You say something and your opponent can't respond, or you demolish something your opponent says. You may really have said something with a subtle flaw that your opponent didn't pick up on, and you "demolished" your opponent through bad reasoning, but your debate skills will make it look good for the audience.
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I think you’re way overestimating how much it matters that @ymeskhout is a lawyer relative to him simply being very sharp and, it seems, having the facts on his side.
Skill issue.
It's a trust issue. People are familiar with the conduct of lawyers with an axe to grind, and simply know better than to voluntarily place themselves in front of that buzzsaw.
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I said "trained lawyer or equivalent". "Or equivalent" includes being a trained debater who doesn't actually practice law.
This is also a good example of not being able to phrase the objection to cover all the loopholes in advance. I thought I covered being sharp and having skills, but it seems you think the way I phrased it didn't.
It's essentially the rationalist bet scenario.
I think you’re overly worried about loopholes and training instead of whether someone who has good evidence has a fair shot in a discussion, not a court of law or formal competition.
You’re actually demonstrating a talent for nitpicking much as a lawyer or policy analyst might. Raw talent can go a long way.
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You might look like a fool if you debate them, but wouldn't you want to just ask the quesiton and hear their argument so you can evaluate it for yourself?
Sure, but I think that's happening here. I'm not really criticizing @ymeshkhout for making his offer, I am just pointing out why people might decline for reasons other than "I lack the courage of my convictions."
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