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Author Topic: Persuasion Techniques  (Read 1497 times)

Scoops Novel

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Persuasion Techniques
« on: September 28, 2012, 08:25:27 am »

Now, I'm someone who loves a debate. However, i tend to come off as patronising and aggravating, with the usual swarm of people looking for some street theatre who butt in either way. Take your average random 17 year old, who doesn't know much about politics, thinks overpopulation is the worlds biggest issue (it is at least one of the higher ones), and works under the opinion that we shouldn't care what others spend thier money on because it's greasing the wheels of the economy, as well as Christian. On the plus side, intelligent. How would you go about challenging anyone of these beliefs, or preferably all of them?
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kaijyuu

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Re: Persuasion Techniques
« Reply #1 on: September 28, 2012, 08:45:44 am »

With a baseball bat.

No really, it depends on the situation. Casual conversation? Definitely not worth the bother. Debate class? Meticulously tear them down, piece by piece.

Though if you just want general advice about being non-patronizing, just remember to respect their views. Don't balk at them, regardless of how ridiculous. However, do make it clear you expect them to actually support their arguments. A war of unsupported assertions ends with both sides just pissing each other off. Go ahead and give them time to look stuff up, and give them your own sources, rather than expecting to convince them of anything in an afternoon. Any sort of turning people's worlds upside down takes time, especially if these views have been indoctrinated into them most their lives.
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Quote from: Chesterton
For, in order that men should resist injustice, something more is necessary than that they should think injustice unpleasant. They must think injustice absurd; above all, they must think it startling. They must retain the violence of a virgin astonishment. When the pessimist looks at any infamy, it is to him, after all, only a repetition of the infamy of existence. But the optimist sees injustice as something discordant and unexpected, and it stings him into action.

LordBucket

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Re: Persuasion Techniques
« Reply #2 on: September 28, 2012, 03:01:09 pm »

How would you go about challenging anyone of these beliefs

What is your goal?

If your goal is to have an invigorating but unproductive debate:

Then present your ideas in any manner of your choosing, and don't worry about the results. Enjoy the process.

If your goal is to grow and learn as a person:

Then listen to their ideas and try to understand why they perceive things as they do. Most perspectives make sense if you can figure out the premise upon which they're based. That premise might be invalid, or only applicable in certain cases. Or it might be a difference in values that naturally leads to a different conclusions. Whatever it is, seek it out and try to understand it. It might not change your point of view, but it can be interesting and useful to understand why others think the way they do.

If your goal is to spend a great deal of time and energy only to end up frustrated and angry:

Present well thought out reasons, provide large quantities of facts and provide sources for those facts. Listen to their objections and do thorough and honest research into why their objections are invalid or inapplicable and present them with this information as well as corroborative evidence to support your position. Systematically demonstrate why the entire foundation of their thinking is invalid, and how each and every conclusion based on that invalid foundation is therefore also invalid. And then watch as they continue believing them anyway.

If your goal is to actually convince somebody of something:

Then forget logic, forget reason, forget evidence, forget everything you learned in debate class, and go attend a few Anthony Robbins, NLP and sales training seminars. Appeals to emotion presented in a framework that is comfortable for the listener are generally far more convincing than well thought out logical processes backed with facts and evidence. People don't spend billions of dollar on insurance and slot machines because they've logically reasoned that these are wise courses of action. Billions of people don't choose their religious beliefs by carefully and impartially examining all available information and making rational decisions about it.

Belief doesn't work that way.

Quote
beliefs

Understand what belief is.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belief

"Belief is the psychological state in which an individual holds a proposition or premise to be true."

Belief has nothing to do with fact or logic or evidence or reason. If you wish to instill belief then work with processes that are relevant to it, and stop wasting your time with irrelevant things like facts and logic and reason.
« Last Edit: September 28, 2012, 03:02:49 pm by LordBucket »
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freeformschooler

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Re: Persuasion Techniques
« Reply #3 on: September 28, 2012, 03:05:25 pm »

Wow. I don't think there's much more to say on this subject than LordBucket did. Excellent supply.
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kaijyuu

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Re: Persuasion Techniques
« Reply #4 on: September 28, 2012, 10:43:19 pm »

Eh, I'm a bit less cynical than Lord Bucket :P You can change people's beliefs with logic, but there are some requirements.

Firstly, they have to respect you; if you're not a teacher, or an authority figure, or at least a friend, your fight will be extremely uphill.
Secondly, you'll never directly convince them of anything; they need to come to new conclusions themselves. Bring to light any cognitive dissonance they have, and they'll resolve it on their own (unless they're brainwashed enough to accept two mutually exclusive beliefs).
Lastly, it'll take a bit of time.



Appealing to emotion works great, because beliefs tend to stem from what "feels" right. But if you don't want to be a manipulative asshole, and if you don't want to indoctrinate people, stick to using patience and logic.
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Quote from: Chesterton
For, in order that men should resist injustice, something more is necessary than that they should think injustice unpleasant. They must think injustice absurd; above all, they must think it startling. They must retain the violence of a virgin astonishment. When the pessimist looks at any infamy, it is to him, after all, only a repetition of the infamy of existence. But the optimist sees injustice as something discordant and unexpected, and it stings him into action.

LordBucket

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Re: Persuasion Techniques
« Reply #5 on: September 29, 2012, 02:25:08 am »

Appealing to emotion works great, because beliefs tend to stem from what "feels" right. But if you don't
want to be a manipulative asshole, and if you don't want to indoctrinate people, stick to using patience and logic.

Hence the question, "what is your goal?"

Think of Ebeneezer Scrooge. Both his nephew and the ghost of his former business partner tried to reason with him. Yet he was so dismissive that he was able to look a ghost in the eye and seriously claim that it was a hallucination.

But Christmas Past showed him how happy he could be if he changed, and Christmas Future showed him pain, loneliness and death if he didn't.

BAM! Changed man.

People are not so different.

thinks overpopulation is the worlds biggest issue

 How would you go about challenging anyone of these beliefs

If you really want to change their mind, try visiting them with the ghosts of christmas past and future.

First...tell them that they're absolute right and that you agree with them. This identifies you as a member of their personal "in" group, and therefore not a threat that needs to be argued with as you would appear to be if you try to argue with them. It also identifies you in their mind as someone who is smart and well informed, which obviously you must be because you agree with them.

Next, encourage them to tell you about why they belief what they do. Not like you're a new convert asking questions. Conversationally, like you already agree with them and know what they're going to say, but enjoy the process of two like minds sharing the same thoughts in agreement. Whatever they say, agree with it. Agree with their reasoning. Tell them they're absolutely right and you agree completely.

...therefore...

Since they're right and you agree with them and the population must obviously be reduced, how shall we go about it? (Say "we." Not "you." This reaffirms that you share group affiliation and encourages them to think with you rather than against you.) Would it be better to do it slowly via forced sterilizations, or more quickly by euthanizing the elderly? Of course it would be most efficient to do both. Yeah...you have grandparents too, but they're kind of old and it would really be for the greater good if they were euthanized. It's a sacrifice you'd be willing to make. Then look at your "friend" and ask them if they'd be willing to do that too, since it's obviously what would have to happen in order to reduce world population.

Don't worry about what they say. Just let them think about that. Makes them feel bad for believing what they do by associating things they obviously don't like, don't agree with and would strongly and personally object to...with the beliefs you want them to no longer have.

If you really want to go for broke, act annoyed that the last hippy-wannabe you tried to convince of this very sensible approach went off on some stupid tangent about how Hitler was a supporter of  these very same ideas: euthanasia, forced sterilizations and population control. Because of course we don't want to be like Hitler. He was a very bad man, and it's a totally irrelevant that he happened to engage in these very sensible actions that we should definitely be doing ourselves.

Don't say this sarcastically or humorously. Say it genuinely. The goal is to associate things that your listener strongly disapproves of, doesn't like and would feel bad having anything to with...with the belief you want them to give up. They're not listening to your words. The brain works by association. So associate population control with murder and death and Hitler and pain and suffering and guilt.

Then...after they've made that association, give them an alternative. Mention how ridiculous it is that people who don't believe in population control actually believe that technology can solve all the problems and that we can all live in some kind of futuristic utopia where everything is all happy and nice. Point out that they've obviously been watching too much star trek if they really believe that technology can allow us to accommodate even more people just because it's allowed us to accommodate the billions we have now . By doing this, yes, you're subtlely giving them solutions, but most people are not listening to the words. The real goal is to simply associate happy nice imagery with the beliefs you want them to adopt. Of course, you my as well do both.

If you want to go full on NLP mode, and with a little practice...you can make statements like these and deliver them via subtle changes in tone and inflection to make stealth points like:

"...how ridiculous it is that people who DON'T BELIEVE IN POPULATION CONTROL actually believe that TECHNOLOGY CAN SOLVE ALL THE PROBLEMS."

You see what's going on? The trick is to deliver these subconscious commands with enough subtlety that they'll go unnoticed by the conscious mind of the listener, but picked up on by the subconscious.

This is the sort of thing that changes beliefs.

It's also how you make compelling advertising. For example, show regular guys drinking beer, being happy, having friends, and with beautiful girls, and the subconscious may tend to associate being happy, having friends and beautiful girls with drinking beer. Nobody would buy beer if the commercials listed rational, logical reasons for drinking it. Want to sell insurance? Make people feel fear by associating not having insurance with how awful it would be if they were to die and leave their loved ones with nothing. Want to sell your college? Make them feel fear of not having a job and associate feelings of wealth and security with having a degree.

...if you want to sell belief, then use mechanisms that instill belief.


« Last Edit: September 29, 2012, 02:26:48 am by LordBucket »
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