Strawman? Nope.Yes,that's an extreme example of my point but it nicely explains it.Our daughter is,and *should* be,more important to my wife than am I.And the reverse is also true.That's *not* to suggest that we're not *very* important to each other.
What would *you* do if it was you,your wife and daughter on the Titanic? Or is that too "strawman" for you?
And another thing just occurred to me...explain to me the stories one hears,often in relation to the awarding of the Medal of Honor,of solders,sailors,Airmen and Marines who fall on a grenade,run through gunfire to get to a buddy,etc at the cost of their own lives.Explain the folly of such acts.
And if you have 3 kids?
That's an easy one.Having already made all the arrangements I could in anticipation of my possible premature demise (life insurance,for example) my surviving family (including the child who got the seat in the lifeboat) would know that that's what spouses/parents do in desperate situations.
——The Straw Man fallacy is committed when a person simply ignores a person’s actual position and substitutes a distorted, exaggerated or misrepresented version of that position-——
I think I nailed it....
99.9 % of families decisions are not a matter of life or death....
No, I mean if you were all on the Titanic. Should have explained my question more clearly.