A fool is someone who clings to opinions without evidence, who rejects facts because they are uncomfortable, and who argues not to discover truth but to defend ego.
When you argue with such a person using logic alone, you often find yourself trapped in circles.
They shift the topic.
They deny evidence.
They become emotional.
They attack your character.
And suddenly, what began as a discussion becomes a battle.
This is where the two questions become powerful tools.
The first question you can ask is:
“What evidence supports your claim?”
This question does several important things.
It shifts the conversation from emotion to facts.
It forces the other person to move beyond personal opinion.
It exposes whether their argument is built on solid ground or on assumption.
Many fools rely on loud confidence rather than proof.
When you calmly ask for evidence, you shine a light on the foundation of their belief.
If they cannot provide credible sources, clear examples, or logical reasoning, their argument weakens naturally—without you needing to attack them.
