tu quoque
English
editEtymology
editFrom Latin tu (“you”) quoque (“also”).
Pronunciation
editNoun
edittu quoque (plural tu quoques)
- (often attributive) An argument whereby an accusation or insult is turned back on the accuser; same to you
- 1890, National Liberal Federation. Proceedings in Connection with the Thirteenth Annual Meeting of the Federation Held in Sheffield, on Thursday & Friday, November 20th & 21st, 1890. With the Annual Report, and the Speeches Delivered by the Right Hon. Sir W. Harcourt, M.P. and the Right Hon. John Morley, M.P., page 104:
- And then they meet us with miserable tu quoques—tu quoques, gentlemen, which are the meanest form of logic, and, in my opinion, the most contemptible development of statesmanship.
- 1977, Alistair Horne, A Savage War of Peace, New York: Review Books, published 2006, page 205:
- In the long run, the facile tu quoque arguments, such as those offered by Massu on the Alleg case, can only lead to an endless escalation of horror and degradation.
- 1989, Malcolm Ashmore, The Reflexive Thesis: Wrighting Sociology of Scientific Knowledge, The University of Chicago Press, →ISBN, page 171:
- Not all tu quoques, of course, are countercritical. For example the anti–logical-positivist and antirelativist tu quoques encountered in Chapter Three purport to discover a “reflexive weakness” in the positive arguments of their opponents such that when such arguments are turned back on themselves the result is an absurdity.
- 2005, Robert Malcolm Murray, Nebojsa Kujundzic, Critical Reflection: A Textbook for Critical Thinking, McGill-Queen’s University Press, →ISBN, page 418:
- Tu quoques shift the attention away from the weakness of one’s own argument. Political platforms are rife with tu quoques: each political party accuses the other of some atrocity or oversight wihout responding to any of the charges laid against them.
- 2007, Perry Anderson, “Russia's Managed Democracy”, in London Review of Books, number 29:2, page 10:
- The idealising side of Furman's construction exposes itself to the tu quoque retorts with which Putin and his aides now relish silencing criticism by the West.
- (obsolete, slang) The vulva or vagina.
- 1808–10, William Hickey, Memoirs of a Georgian Rake, Folio Society 1995, p. 309:
- I presented the mouth of the bottle in a slanting direction toward her. In an instant, she with her fingers contracted the lips of her tu quoque so as to produce a narrow curved stream, so correctly aimed that at least one-third actually entered the bottle.
- 1808–10, William Hickey, Memoirs of a Georgian Rake, Folio Society 1995, p. 309:
Translations
editSee also
edit- argumentum ad hominem
- ditto, brother smut
- pot calling the kettle black
- two wrongs don't make a right
- whataboutism