Book contents
- Giving the Devil His Due
- Giving the Devil His Due
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Who Is the Devil and What Is He Due?
- Part I The Advocatus Diaboli: Reflections on Free Thought and Free Speech
- Part II Homo Religiosus: Reflections on God and Religion
- Part III Deferred Dreams: Reflections on Politics and Society
- Chapter 12 Another Dream Deferred
- Chapter 13 Healing the Bonds of Affection
- Chapter 14 Governing Mars
- Chapter 15 The Sandy Hook Effect
- Chapter 16 On Guns and Tyranny
- Chapter 17 Debating Guns
- Chapter 18 Another Fatal Conceit
- Part IV Scientia Humanitatis: Reflections on Scientific Humanism
- Part V Transcendent Thinkers: Reflections on Controversial Intellectuals
- Notes
- Index
Chapter 17 - Debating Guns
What Conservatives and Liberals Really Differ On about Guns (and Everything Else)
from Part III - Deferred Dreams: Reflections on Politics and Society
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2020
- Giving the Devil His Due
- Giving the Devil His Due
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Who Is the Devil and What Is He Due?
- Part I The Advocatus Diaboli: Reflections on Free Thought and Free Speech
- Part II Homo Religiosus: Reflections on God and Religion
- Part III Deferred Dreams: Reflections on Politics and Society
- Chapter 12 Another Dream Deferred
- Chapter 13 Healing the Bonds of Affection
- Chapter 14 Governing Mars
- Chapter 15 The Sandy Hook Effect
- Chapter 16 On Guns and Tyranny
- Chapter 17 Debating Guns
- Chapter 18 Another Fatal Conceit
- Part IV Scientia Humanitatis: Reflections on Scientific Humanism
- Part V Transcendent Thinkers: Reflections on Controversial Intellectuals
- Notes
- Index
Summary
This essay began as a blog post on Skeptic.com that I wrote after a series of debates I did with John Lott, who has emerged as one of the strongest opponents of gun-control measures and a regular guest on Fox News. The original blog included my PowerPoint slides and accompanying commentary that I used in my debates; here I primarily focus on my experiences debating Lott, drawing on some of the more poignant data slides I used to counter his thesis that more guns equals less crime. This is followed by a discussion of a more recent debate I did with a radical gun advocate named Michael Huemer, who made the argument for guns as a necessary bulwark against governmental tyranny, which I debunked in the previous essay. I did not fully understand where Lott and Huemer (or gun-rights advocates of any kind) were coming from until I read George Lakoff’s book Moral Politics, which lifted the scales from my eyes and enabled me to understand what both conservatives and liberals really want, and not just in the realm of gun control, but in all dominions of life. The final part of this essay addresses those insights.
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- Giving the Devil his DueReflections of a Scientific Humanist, pp. 181 - 197Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020