Pidge,
Let’s not forget poisoning the well either, Thick..........Damn this predictive text.
Your ignorance is showing again. As you can’t be arsed to look it up for yourself, I’ll do it for you:
The
ad hom is a fallacy of
(ir)relevance. If you say, “it’s my contention that the sun is 93 million miles away” and I reply, “but you’re fat” that’s an
ad hom. That’s because my reply does not follow from your contention – it’s a
non sequitur (another term you don't understand).
On the other hand, if the person’s behaviour
is relevant to the attempted discourse – your propensity for playing pigeon chess, your frequent lying etc come to mind here especially – then referring to these behaviours isn’t an
ad hom at all. Why? Because it's
relevant.
Here’s a link to get you started:
https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argumentum_ad_hominemAnd here’s the relevant extract from it:
“
Not ad hom[edit]
There is common confusion about what is, and what isn't, ad hominem — that is, what does and does not employ fallacious reasoning. Generally, ad hominem does not mean "crass insult".
When debating about a person[edit]
As ad hominem arguments are only fallacious if they do not follow (non sequitur)-if the argument and the person's character are related then there may not be a fallacy. In particular, a criticism is not an ad hominem argument if a person's merits are actually the topic of the argument. If the subject of the debate is the inherent trustworthiness of someone, or what prior probability you would assign to them telling the truth, then their previous track record is relevant to the subject. If debating a person's ability to do a task, then their effectiveness at that task or suitably similar ones, is relevant.”Long ago and far away I cautioned you against attempting words and terns you clearly don’t understand, of which there are very many ("philosophical materialism" etc).
Perhaps you should have listened.