Quote:
It sounds like you hold quite a few misconceptions about marijuana. Honestly, I find what you're saying a little offensive. Hell, drinking alcohol kills brain cells. Do you not date women who drink?
A stoner has the connotation of someone who habitually engages in smoking. I wouldn't date a drunk, nor would I date a stoner, though I wouldn't have a problem if she indulged in it from time to time as a social activity.
To the OP, make it evident that you don't care for her smoking from the beginning. Don't try to "change her mind slowly or gently--it never works. Trust me on this.
I actually typed out a lengthy response of how to persuade someone and why it is a bad idea to go the "gentle route" in a relationship, but I think it is outside the scope of this thread. If you're interested, PM me.
Quote:
I'd like to call attention to your horrible reasoning skills here. You initially disregard the anecdotal evidence of others and then immediately base your argument on... anecdotal evidence. It doesn't work that way. There are plenty perfectly valid reasons why one might want to deem a certain category of evidence as unworthy of proof of a certain position, but you can't just ignore evidence that goes against your beliefs and then use the same type to try and make a point..... well... I guess you technically CAN do it, but it makes you just as big a moron as you suggest "stoners" are.
This is mistaken. The categorical rejection of anecdotal evidence in public discourse is largely because it is unverifiable. For instance, if you made the argument that all crows were black, and I said you were a liar because I just saw a white crow yesterday, my evidence would not be appropriate as useful evidence because it lacks verifiability in the public domain.
This is not, however, a public issue. You are trying to persuade him to accept a different way of viewing things (whether or not you admit that this is your intention--it is the status of the discourse...he is your audience and you are making a persuasive case). Because of this, his anecdotal evidence is not in question as mine might be in the crow example. He
knows that his evidence is true. As such his anecdotal evidence holds a subjectively greater weight than someone else's, because it is verifiable.
It is as if I were to claim, "I saw a white crow", and you said, "No you didn't, anecdotal evidence is not allowed". That doesn't change the fact that I saw the crow. You could try and convince me that what I saw wasn't REALLY a crow, or that I was hallucinating at the time, but you can't demand that I reject it because it is unacceptably subjective.
Just to anticipate a few possible responses--no, anecdotal evidence is not highly regarded in scientific discourse, but that is largely because the scientific world is a generally public domain, and as we have said earlier, the two hold different standards for good evidence.
You could also critique anecdotal evidence on the grounds that it runs the risk of being unbalanced by statistical and psychological biases, which would be good criticisms, but would still allow his subjective experience to be relevant to the topic of conversation.