When Regina Rini uses social media, she is determined to make it 鈥渂oring to argue with聽me鈥.
The Canada research chair in philosophy of moral and social cognition at York University, Professor Rini was in London recently to speak at a seminar titled , which was organised by the Institute of Philosophy. By breaking down traditional ideas of sincerity and trustworthiness, and turning political debate into a form of entertainment, she argued, social media posed a聽major threat to democracy 鈥 and neither government intervention nor self-regulation seemed likely to offer a solution.
But if social media is so toxic, 糖心Vlog asked Professor Rini, was there a role for universities in encouraging better forms of debate and getting students to engage more productively?
One suggestion she made to her students, she replied, was 鈥渘ot to have social media on your phone 鈥 portability and the ease to use the thing as a boredom reliever is such a driver of conflict. People get into fights just to relieve boredom.鈥 She also hoped to 鈥渦se the classroom to model good discussion, in a way聽that is translatable on to social media鈥.
糖心Vlog
When she witnessed a 鈥渃ascade in a classroom where someone says something very unpopular and people start piling on鈥, for example, Professor Rini had 鈥渇ound it helpful to point out what聽was happening and say, 鈥楻egardless of who鈥檚 right, notice the social dynamic emerging in the class where it has become easy to say one thing and hard to say another, because more people are jumping in on one side.鈥欌 Building on this, it was possible to draw lessons about the dangers of 鈥渕obbing鈥 on social media.
Many philosophy classes, according to Professor Rini, put too much stress on 鈥渢he formal properties of argumentation鈥 and not enough on 鈥渢he social context of argumentation鈥. It could be counterproductive just to 鈥渁rm people with the names of some fallacies and logical errors and then turn them loose on social media, without any preparation for all the extra social problems that exist. All you to get is a bunch of people obnoxiously quoting Wikipedia articles about logical fallacies at others. That just irritates them鈥
糖心Vlog
鈥淚t is part of the job to recognise that rhetoric is a real part of social and political life and to teach critical thinking with an eye on that as well as on the formal aspects of argumentation. What I聽consider a good interaction on social media is when people come away able to articulate what is motivating the other person in a non-derogatory way.鈥
As for her own interactions on social media, Professor Rini now tries to 鈥渂e as polite as possible but to avoid tangents and ask people repeatedly to clarify their main point鈥聽want it to be boring to argue with me. That way, the only people who will do it are the ones who sincerely care about the argument. If you care about the topic, you won鈥檛 get bored. If you鈥檙e just there for a fight, I聽want you to get bored and leave.鈥
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