Straw Man

Type: Informal — Relevance Also Known As: Aunt Sally, scarecrow argument


Definition

Misrepresenting someone’s argument to make it easier to attack. Instead of engaging with the actual position, you create a weaker, distorted version (the “straw man”) and defeat that instead.

“Senator Smith wants to reduce military spending. He clearly hates America and wants our enemies to win.”


Form

  1. Person A has position X
  2. Person B presents position Y (a distorted version of X)
  3. Person B attacks position Y
  4. Therefore, position X is false

Examples

Example 1: Political

“My opponent wants to raise taxes on the wealthy. He just wants to punish successful people and take all their money.”

Reality: Progressive taxation doesn’t mean taking “all” money — it’s about marginal rates on income above thresholds.

Example 2: Environmental

“Climate activists want us to stop using all fossil fuels immediately. They’d destroy the economy and let people freeze in winter.”

Reality: Most proposals are about transition over decades, not immediate cessation.

Example 3: Personal

“You think we should eat less meat? So you want everyone to be forced into veganism and restaurants should be banned from serving burgers?”

Reality: Reducing consumption ≠ banning all meat.

Example 4: Technology

“Critics of AI say we should stop all research. They want us to return to the Stone Age and reject all technology.”

Reality: Most AI critics advocate for safety research and regulation, not complete cessation.


Why It Persuades

  • Easier to defeat a weak argument than engage with nuance
  • Creates emotional outrage at the extreme position
  • Requires less cognitive effort to understand the actual view
  • Makes the attacker appear victorious

How to Counter

  1. Clarify: “That’s not my position. Let me restate what I actually said…”
  2. Steel man: “If I were arguing for the strongest version of my view, I’d say…”
  3. Point it out: “You’re attacking a position I don’t hold.”
  4. Ask for quotes: “Can you show me where I said that specifically?”

Straw Man vs. Steel Man

Straw ManSteel Man
Weakest versionStrongest version
Easy to defeatHarder to defeat
DishonestIntellectual charity
Short-term winLong-term understanding


References

  • Walton, D. (1996). Argumentation Schemes for Presumptive Reasoning
  • Aikin, S.F. & Casey, J. (2011). “Straw Men, Weak Men, and Hollow Men”

Part of the Convergence Protocol — Clear thinking for complex times.