CASE FILE Steelmanning §3/7
passage

Reading

After Anatol Rapoport / Daniel Dennett, "Intuition Pumps and Other Tools for Thinking"

Build It Before You Break It.

A strawman is the weakest version of your opponent’s view — easy to knock down, and worthless to knock down, because nobody actually held it. A steelman is the strongest version — the one its smartest defender would recognise and endorse. The discipline is simple to state and hard to do: you have not earned the right to attack a position until you can argue it better than the person who holds it.

Why bother, when your goal is to win? Three reasons.

It makes you right less often — which is good. Building the strongest opposing case is the fastest way to discover your own is wrong. Better to find out in private than in the tribunal.

It makes your win count. An audience that watches you defeat the real argument believes you. An audience that watches you defeat a scarecrow knows you dodged.

It’s the only honest move. Arguing in frame means engaging what your opponent actually claims, not a convenient cartoon of it.

Rapoport’s rules give you the steps. Before you rebut: (1) re-state the opposing view so well its holder says “yes, that’s it”; (2) list the agreements — what’s genuinely right in it; (3) name what you learned from it. Then, and only then, attack — the strongest version, with its best evidence already on the table.

Watch for the AI trap: ask a chatbot to “argue against X” and it will often hand you the strawman, because clichéd weak versions are what it has seen most. Demand the champion, not the scarecrow.

Open source ↗

Check yourself

  1. 1

    What exactly makes a steelman different from just “being fair” to the other side?

    Reveal answer

    A steelman is the STRONGEST version — stated so well its holder would endorse it, with its best evidence supplied by you — not merely a polite or accurate restatement.

  2. 2

    Why does steelmanning make your eventual rebuttal MORE convincing, not less?

    Reveal answer

    The audience sees you defeated the real argument, not a scarecrow — so your win is credible. Beating a strawman signals you dodged.

  3. 3

    You ask an AI to “argue against” your essay and it gives a weak objection. What’s happening, and what do you ask instead?

    Reveal answer

    It defaulted to the common, clichéd (strawman) version from its training data. Ask for the STRONGEST opposing case with its best evidence and a defender’s reasoning.