Brian63
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2001
- Messages
- 1,639
- Location
- Michigan
- Gender
- Male
- Basic Beliefs
- Freethinker/atheist/humanist
When people debate each other, especially in a very hostile and aggressive debate, each side usually wants to get “the last word” in. Why do we have that tendency? Do we feel psychologically better ourselves if we can throw in that last jab and not feel like we were bullied down to the ground at the end? Does it bring us pleasure to insult the other person 1 last time before we call it quits?
Does it change if the debate is done in a private setting, or in front of a public audience? My own view is that having “the last word” is much more important to people when they are debating in front of an audience. We have something of a hero complex, and so we want to look like we withstood the last round of insults and stayed standing strong. It is not so important if the debate is held in a private manner though just between the participants.
If you are debating other people though, I think the goal should not be to try and persuade that debate opponent. A more realistic goal is to try and convince any onlookers and witnesses of the debate. You are not going to get your debate opponent to say “You know what, I change my mind on all this and I think you are right after all” especially if the 2 of you are engaged in a very hostile insult war with each other in front of an audience. Preserving our personal and public egos is much more important than actually learning and thinking clearly. If the goal then is to persuade the onlookers of the debate, I do think it is not important to get in the last word. What is more important is to get the last ***BEST*** word in. We should try to make our last contribution to the debate very easy to understand, very relatable, and very agreeable to for the audience. If the debate opponent responds to that post then with some stupid 1-liner or some mess of incoherent thoughts with insults, the onlookers would recognize that and see that you still “won” the debate even though you did not get in the very last word in the debate.
Do you try to get in the last word when you debate, either consciously or subconsciously? If you are only watching other people debate each other and one or both of them is very calm and relaxed, does that influence your thoughts about which person won the debate? If one or both of the debaters becomes very emotionally angry and insulting towards the other, is that another sign of who won the debate? How do you think other people determine who won a debate?
I do believe that debaters tend to take a provoking strategy, where each person tries to stay very calm and relaxed themselves during a debate, while also trying to provoke the opponent and make them angry. Onlookers then would see the calmer person as having been thinking rationally and logically, not just emotionally, so that would give them the appearance of having won the debate.
Brian
Does it change if the debate is done in a private setting, or in front of a public audience? My own view is that having “the last word” is much more important to people when they are debating in front of an audience. We have something of a hero complex, and so we want to look like we withstood the last round of insults and stayed standing strong. It is not so important if the debate is held in a private manner though just between the participants.
If you are debating other people though, I think the goal should not be to try and persuade that debate opponent. A more realistic goal is to try and convince any onlookers and witnesses of the debate. You are not going to get your debate opponent to say “You know what, I change my mind on all this and I think you are right after all” especially if the 2 of you are engaged in a very hostile insult war with each other in front of an audience. Preserving our personal and public egos is much more important than actually learning and thinking clearly. If the goal then is to persuade the onlookers of the debate, I do think it is not important to get in the last word. What is more important is to get the last ***BEST*** word in. We should try to make our last contribution to the debate very easy to understand, very relatable, and very agreeable to for the audience. If the debate opponent responds to that post then with some stupid 1-liner or some mess of incoherent thoughts with insults, the onlookers would recognize that and see that you still “won” the debate even though you did not get in the very last word in the debate.
Do you try to get in the last word when you debate, either consciously or subconsciously? If you are only watching other people debate each other and one or both of them is very calm and relaxed, does that influence your thoughts about which person won the debate? If one or both of the debaters becomes very emotionally angry and insulting towards the other, is that another sign of who won the debate? How do you think other people determine who won a debate?
I do believe that debaters tend to take a provoking strategy, where each person tries to stay very calm and relaxed themselves during a debate, while also trying to provoke the opponent and make them angry. Onlookers then would see the calmer person as having been thinking rationally and logically, not just emotionally, so that would give them the appearance of having won the debate.
Brian
