No, it's not a straw man argument*, and I'm not adding anything to the proposition. Might I request that you reread my restatement of the proposition?
Article: "Intelligence doesn’t make someone more likely to change their mind. People with higher IQs are better at crafting arguments to support a position—but only if they already agree with it."
vs.
BFK: "people with higher IQs are only better at crafting arguments for a position if they already agree with it."
They certainly do look the same - don't know what I was thinking. Nevermind.
I am simply analyzing the sentence logic of the proposition. My analysis is reductive; I'm trying (and failing, I suppose) to show that it's the construction of the proposition, not its content, that is the problem.
So what makes the construction confusing, wrong, ambiguous, etc. - what is your concern?
It seems clear (as we've all been able to clearly identify what its saying without confusion) - why do you want to keep rearranging it and adding/removing content so that it says something other than what is actually written?
Perhaps the proposition should read:
"People with higher IQs are better at crafting arguments generally; unfortunately, they prefer to do so for positions with which they agree."
Right. I definitely agree that if you change the original statement it says something else. Indeed, that's why there's a whole study done rather than just some guy giving his opinion to a journalist, right? I know that I certainly won't, and guess that neither will you, be reading the original work paraphrased by the article, so again what is your goal?
ETA: It's not a straw man argument because I'm not arguing either for or against the proposition.
Which is why I said,
I believe that's the main component of a straw man argument, isn't it?
. You're absolutely right, until you make an argument (which apparently you haven't), its not.
If you are making an argument, or indeed a point of any kind, I don't know what it is.
Phew, 73 more to go. Going to be a long discussion.