| ▲ | Maxatar 3 hours ago | |||||||
So you are making things up... thanks for confirming that. While I appreciate that you reviewed what Google "sez"... you have misunderstood the relevant context which is that the U.S. Air Force also requires that you complete Initial Flight Training (IFT) before you start the Air Force's own formal training program (UPT). In IFT you will not be required to pass ground school before you get to fly. Furthermore, even if the Air Force did not require IFT before UPT (the Air Force's own training program), you've completely changed the nature of your argument. I have no dispute about whether the Air Force may or may not have stricter requirements for their pilots, but that wasn't your argument. >I stand by my statement. You've proudly planted your flag on a point nobody was contesting, which is a strange hill to celebrate on but you do you. >But that does not rule out B implies A. A and B can be strongly related to each other. Discussing a topic with someone who not only uses logically fallacies as justification for their argument but brazenly doubles down on said fallacy is a good sign that this is probably not a good discussion to continue spending time on. Like am I supposed to simply accept your logical fallacy and take on the burden of disproving every claim you can dream up simply because you've asserted it isn't logically impossible? The person making the claim carries the burden of supporting it, and "they're strongly related" is something you have to actually show, not something I'm obligated to refute on your behalf. | ||||||||
| ▲ | WalterBright 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Ground school comes first at IFT https://www.baseops.net/militarypilot/usaf_ift.html Note that a tree implies it is made of wood. If you find a stick of wood, odds are it came from a tree. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | jibal 34 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
In addition to affirmation of the consequent he's also employing attacking a strawman, petitio principii, faulty analogy, and goalpost shifting, at least. His followup example "Note that a tree implies it is made of wood. If you find a stick of wood, odds are it came from a tree." is hilarious. No doubt there are numerous other examples completely unrelated to coders and whiteboard tests where A implies B and B is highly correlated to A, but their existence tells us nothing about coders and whiteboard tests and doesn't justify a blatant fallacy of affirmation of the consequent. Here's something to consider: just because someone is good at writing compilers or designing a language, that doesn't entail anything about the quality of their arguments. | ||||||||