I like this idea, and I'd like to see it developed further. I don't see any reason why FGCAs shouldn't be catalogued and learned alongside logical fallacies for the same reasons.
I guess the important distinction would be that certain FGCAs can be used non-fallaciously, and some of these seem to have valid use-cases, like pointing out confirmation bias and mind-projection fallacy. Others are fallacious in their fully-general form, but have valid uses in their non-fully-general forms, so it is important to distinguish these. (e.g. pointing out vagueness or that something is too complicated and has too many dependencies for a given argument to have much weight.)
Great post!
I apologize for mentioning this, but there were a lot of typos in this, which made it a bit hard to read. I want to link this to a few friends who are not LWers, but when I am not familiar with the source of something, typos make me question the credibility of the author (they also provide an easy excuse to discount things people don't want to hear). I don't want that to happen when I show people, so I figured I'd help you out if you feel like cleaning it up a bit. Here's a quick list I put together for you:
Awesome. Thank you for the very actionable response.
Typos fixed.
Follow-up to: Knowing About Biases Can Hurt People
See also: Fully General Counterargument (LW Wiki)
With the caveat that the arguer doesn't need to be aware that this is the case. But if (s)he is not aware of that, this seems like the other biases we are prone to. The question is: Is there a tendency or risk to accidentally form FGCAs? Do we fall easily into this mind-trap?
This post tries to (non-exhaustively) list some FGCAs as well as possible countermeasures.
The List
Here is a list of my own making:
Do you now some more? Into what clusters do these FGCAs fall?
Self-sealing Belief
Why do we use FGCAs? One reason may be when we are arguing from within a self-sealing belief:
Preventive Action
What are known ways to avoid FGCAs?
One specific method against this mind trap is being humbly gullible.
Another is to practice Steelmanning as long as you avoid the dangers of steelmanning. Especially applicable is Steelmanning Inefficiency.
More general advice can of course be found in the Twelve Virtues of Rationality. See also the concise and improved versions.