The notion of a "true" anything is just a fallacy that belies the reality on the ground.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_true_scotsman
The No True Scotsman fallacy is a rather cheap method of escapism from an uncomfortable situation.
So...
there's no true beer, there's no true cheese, there's no true male, there's no true fish. there's no true temperature, there's no true youth, there's no true government, there's no true dog, there's no true redhead, there's no true basketball player, there's no true gay....
The amusing thing is you and others in this thread still believe, and adamantly I might add, that there are exceptions to the No True Scotsman fallacy.
There aren't.
Added to that fact is there exists no official definition for any word in English. The entire lexicon is fluid and vernacular. The word conservative means what all conservatives are or believe, not a few whom some would like to term "true." Not all Scotsmen need eat haggis.
But you're so convinced otherwise, aren't you?
You're confusing common use of words and technical use. Otherwise we'd have to insist that "mass" and "photon" and "radar" mean what most people conceive of them as. When a psychologist tells someone he's suffering from depression,do you really think he means a bad case of the blues? When a psychiatrist diagnoses schizophrenia, does he mean a form of madness where someone has different people in his head?
If words mean only what their common use establishes, then there;s no hope for actually knowing anything, because the masses of the ignorant have more say on what a word means than people who actually know.
It's simply a matter of your failure to explain how you have the privilege of exception to the No Scotsman Fallacy.
I'm not defining or describing what a conservative is. I'm defending the well established logical theory of logical fallacy which you ought to be privy to.
You're going far beyond the well-established theory and using it to demolish meaning. That dives into a fallacy of its own, one which undermines all discourse.
Because there is no fallacy when there is a set definition of what a conservative is, backed by decades of writings and people that fit into said definition, and these people that you claim are conservatives do not.
There is no fallacy there. It is in your own delusional mind.
Correct. There are works in print, scholarly works, which establish what a conservative is. As with any discipline, politics has definitions, and to abandon them for whatever is popular is to cast aside the ability to think. Meaning becomes dichotomous; words take on two or three different meanings depending on who's doing the discussing: liberal means someone who stands up for individual rights, liberal means someone who wants to stifle all individuality, liberal means socialist hiding behind another name....
The No True Scotsman fallacy applies to subjective use of terms. But not all terms are subjective. When an anthropologist speaks of matrilineal inheritance in a patriarchal tribalism, that has a very specific meaning -- an objective, established meaning set out for all to use and thus know what the other person is talking about.
JB3 is saying there is an objective definition of the word "conservative". JockBoy is replying by saying there's no such thing as objective meaning. That's an opinion to which he is certainly entitled -- but it entails the death of knowledge.