- Ad captandum
In
rhetoric an argument "ad captandum," "for capturing" the gullibility of the naïve among the listeners or readers, is an unsound, specious argument, a kind of seductivecasuistry . The longer form of the term is "ad captandum vulgus" (Latin , 'to win over the crowd'). The "ad captandum" argument may be painfully vivid insound bite s frompolitician s on TV news programs. Like most perceptions of logical transgressions, the "ad captandum" assessment may not be neutral and at the same time may be quite accurate.:"No right-thinking person could disagree with that."::-- Rev.
Ian Paisley , House of Commons, London,2 January 2004 , referring to a statement by Lord Hutton about the undesirability of lying:"The police are totally opposed to it, as are all right-thinking people."::--
David Maclean , House of Commons, London,9 February 1995 (referring to legalisation ofcannabis ):"I think that all right-thinking people in this country are sick and tired of being told that ordinary, decent people are fed up in this country with being sick and tired... I'm certainly not! But I'm sick and tired of being told that I am."::--
parody of "ad captandum" statement, fromMonty Python
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