Throughout my 13 and a half years on RF, I have occasionally noticed that some people assume that if they have the last word in a debate, or if the other person stops responding, then the person who has the last word is the "winner" of the debate—the idea being that not responding necessarily means conceding an opposing argument.
Do you think this is the case, though? For instance, I have seen people stop responding due to being busy, not finding it worthwhile or productive to repeat themselves, making their points and not wishing to debate or try to convince anyone else, etc. I have sometimes stopped responding in debates for one or more of these reasons, myself, and nowadays, I rarely have the time, inclination, or energy to get into long debates that span a few or more pages.
Furthermore, I think it's productive to test one's ideas in debate and also read other arguments and perspectives rather than join debates to "win" or try to "prove" one's views even if trying to do so takes pages and pages of arguing back and forth. Even when one may have a point they want to share or they see something they wish to clarify—such as a claim they perceive to be highly inaccurate or even harmful—I have come to believe that debating for many pages has diminishing returns and rarely adds more clarity beyond the first few or several posts.
I have added a poll out of curiosity. I voted no: I don't think that no longer responding to a debate usually means someone has conceded a point, and I would rather not assume that this is why someone has stopped responding. Occasionally, it may mean that, but I have found that most of the time, people stop responding for any number of other reasons.
Do you think this is the case, though? For instance, I have seen people stop responding due to being busy, not finding it worthwhile or productive to repeat themselves, making their points and not wishing to debate or try to convince anyone else, etc. I have sometimes stopped responding in debates for one or more of these reasons, myself, and nowadays, I rarely have the time, inclination, or energy to get into long debates that span a few or more pages.
Furthermore, I think it's productive to test one's ideas in debate and also read other arguments and perspectives rather than join debates to "win" or try to "prove" one's views even if trying to do so takes pages and pages of arguing back and forth. Even when one may have a point they want to share or they see something they wish to clarify—such as a claim they perceive to be highly inaccurate or even harmful—I have come to believe that debating for many pages has diminishing returns and rarely adds more clarity beyond the first few or several posts.
I have added a poll out of curiosity. I voted no: I don't think that no longer responding to a debate usually means someone has conceded a point, and I would rather not assume that this is why someone has stopped responding. Occasionally, it may mean that, but I have found that most of the time, people stop responding for any number of other reasons.