I offered my standard example. Imagine that a university department has an opening and is down to two or three well qualified candidates. They learn that one of them is an articulate supporter of South African Apartheid. Does the chance of hiring him go up or down? If the university is actually committed to intellectual diversity, the chance should go up—it is, after all, a position that neither faculty nor students are likely to have been exposed to. In fact, in any university I am familiar with, it would go sharply down.
I would argue that this is a good heuristic for a number of reasons:
He may not know all the arguments in favor of the apartheid, but he knows that the issue has been examined over the decades in various cultures and the expert opinion is against it.
Unless the person is a subject matter expert, he or she ought not to be discounting the prevailing wisdom (which may torn out to be wrong, but in most cases you have to become an expert to show it).
A person willing to be a vocal critical dilettante about someone else's area of expertise is bad for the smooth functioning of the department of a faculty
An alternative question I might have put to him was whether he could make the argument for apartheid about as well as a competent defender of that system could.
That's a wrong question to ask. He is not an expert. The right one would be
whether a competent opponent could make the argument for apartheid about as well as a competent defender of that system could.
And the answer would likely to be yes.
Anyway, upvoted for bringing up an interesting issue, downvoted for being taken by bad logic, overall a wash.
An alternative question I might have put to him was whether he could make the argument for apartheid about as well as a competent defender of that system could.
That's a wrong question to ask. He is not an expert. The right one would be
whether a competent opponent could make the argument for apartheid about as well as a competent defender of that system could.
Shouldn't his arguments screen off his authority? Isn't that the whole point of arguments?
Related: Heuristics for Evaluating the Soundness of the Academic Mainstream, Admitting to Bias, The Ideological Turing Test