Generally, a personal attack is committed when a person substitutes abusive remarks for evidence when examining another person's claims or comments. It is considered a personal attack when a person starts referencing a supposed flaw or weakness in an individual's personality, beliefs, lifestyle, convictions or principles, and use it as a debate tactic or as a means of avoiding discussion of the relevance or truthfulness of what the person said. It works on the reasoning that, by discrediting the source of an argument, e.g. the person making it, the argument itself can be weakened. This line of "reasoning" is fallacious because the attack is directed at the person making the claim and not the claim itself. The truth value of a claim is independent of the person making the claim. After all, no matter how morally repugnant a person might be, he or she can still make true claims.
For example, two senators running for the same office are in a heated debate:
Senator1: "I believe we should have tougher penalties for Somali drivers caught speeding."
Senator2: "But is it not true that you allowed your own Somali wife to speed even after she got a speeding ticket?"
On the other hand, illuminating real character flaws and inconsistencies in the position of an opponent are a vital part of the public political process.
Use of a personal attack in an argument constitutes a logical fallacy called Ad hominem, a term that comes from a Latin phrase meaning "toward the man".
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