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Arguments & Logic

Uniqueness

Uniqueness is the argument that a specific outcome only happens because of a specific cause - used to defend a policy or attack a counterplan by showing that something is truly new.

Uniqueness in debate refers to the claim that a specific outcome happens only because of a specific cause. It is a concept most commonly used in policy and Cross-Examination debate, where it is essential for proving that a disadvantage or advantage is truly caused by the proposed policy rather than something else.

Why Uniqueness Matters

If the outcome you are describing would happen anyway - with or without your opponent's policy - then their argument loses force. Uniqueness is the answer to 'so what? That was going to happen regardless.' Strong uniqueness arguments show that the link between the policy and the impact is specifically caused by that policy and nothing else.

A Quick Example

Imagine the Opposition argues: 'Your tax policy will hurt the economy.' The Proposition might respond: 'The economy is already slowing down regardless of our policy - that slowdown is not unique to us.' That uniqueness response weakens the Opposition's argument by removing the specific causal link.

Want to actually learn how to use these terms?

DSDC teaches every concept in this glossary in live online classes - from beginner debate to advanced competitive training. Book a free consultation to find the right level for your child.