What they actually mean is rather “these two things are very dissimilar”, or “these two things are unequal”.

I guess in most situations “cannot be compared” could be replaced by “cannot be equated”, with less lingual inaccuracy and still the same message conveyed.

To come to the conclusion that two things are very dissimilar, very unequal, one necessarily has to compare them. So it’s rather odd to come up with “cannot be compared” after just literally comparing them.

For example, bikes and cars. We compare them by looking at each’s details, and finding any dissimilarities. They have a different amount of wheels. Different propulsion methods. Different price, and so on.

When this list becomes very long, or some details have a major meaning which should not be equated, people say they cannot be compared.

An example with a major meaning difference: Some people say factory farming of animals and the Holocaust are very similar, or something alike. Others disagree, presumably because they feel wether it’s humans or animals being treated, the motives or whatnot make a difference big enough that the two should not be compared equated.

Can you follow my thoughts? Are ‘dissimilar’ or ‘unequal’ better terms? I’d be especially interested in arguments in favor of ‘compared’.

  • Spzi@lemm.eeOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    5 months ago

    Thanks for taking the time to write this detailed reply. I guess you’re right about the equivocation and I can see the irony :D

    Though I have not fully understood yet. Following your example, the two different concepts are …

    • in case A, we compare the value of a property (different top speed)
    • in case B, we compare the purpose or context-dependend usefulness of an attribute (different types of liquid container holders)

    What blocks me from fully agreeing is that still, both are comparisons. And they don’t feel so different to me that I would call them different concepts. When I look up examples for equivocations, those do feel very different to me.

    I still guess you’re right. If you (or someone else) could help me see the fallacy, I’d appreciate.