Fallacy
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A fallacy is a component of an argument that is demonstrably flawed in its logic or form, thus rendering the argument invalid in whole, except in the case of begging the question, a false analogy and other informal fallacies. In logical arguments, fallacies are either formal or informal. Because the validity of a deductive argument depends on its form, a formal fallacy, or logical fallacy is a deductive argument that has an invalid form, whereas an informal fallacy is any other invalid mode of reasoning whose flaw is not in the form of the argument.
Beginning with Aristotle, informal fallacies have generally been placed in one of several categories, depending on the source of the fallacy. There are fallacies of relevance, fallacies involving causal reasoning, and fallacies resulting from ambiguities. A similar approach to understanding and classifying fallacies is provided by argumentation theory, discussed in brief in the last paragraph of this section.
Recognizing fallacies in actual arguments may be difficult since arguments are often structured using rhetorical patterns that obscure the logical connections between assertions. As we illustrate with various examples, fallacies may also exploit the emotions or intellectual or psychological weaknesses of the interlocutor. Having the capability of recognizing logical fallacies in arguments will hopefully reduce the likelihood of such an occurrence.
A different approach to understanding and classifying fallacies is provided by argumentation theory; see for instance the van Eemeren, Grootendorst reference below. In this approach, an argument is regarded as an interactive protocol between individuals which attempts to resolve a disagreement. The protocol is regulated by certain rules of interaction and violations of these rules are fallacies. Many of the fallacies in the list below are best understood as being fallacies in this sense.
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[edit] Aristotelian fallacies
[edit] Material fallacies
The classification of material fallacies widely adopted by modern logicians and based on that of Aristotle, Organon (Sophistici elenchi), is as follows:
- Fallacy of Accident (also called destroying the exception or a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid) meaning to argue erroneously from a general rule to a particular case, without proper regard to particular conditions that vitiate the application of the general rule; e.g. if manhood suffrage be the law, arguing that a criminal or a lunatic must, therefore, have a vote.
- Converse Fallacy of Accident (also called reverse accident, destroying the exception, or a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter) meaning to argue from a special case to a general rule.
- Irrelevant Conclusion (also called Ignoratio Elenchi), wherein, instead of proving the fact in dispute, the arguer seeks to gain his point by diverting attention to some extraneous fact (as in the legal story of "No case. Abuse the plaintiff's attorney"). The fallacies are common in platform oratory, in which the speaker obscures the real issue by appealing to his audience on the grounds of
- purely personal considerations (argumentum ad hominem)
- popular sentiment (argumentum ad populum, appeal to the majority)
- fear (argumentum ad baculum)
- conventional propriety (argumentum ad verecundiam)
- This fallacy has been illustrated by ethical or theological arguments wherein the fear of punishment is subtly substituted for abstract right as the sanction of moral obligation.
- Begging the question (also called Petitio Principii or Circulus in Probando--arguing in a circle) consists in demonstrating a conclusion by means of premises that pre-suppose that conclusion. Jeremy Bentham points out that this fallacy may lurk in a single word, especially in an epithet, e.g. if a measure were condemned simply on the ground that it is alleged to be "un-English".
- Fallacy of the Consequent, really a species of Irrelevant Conclusion, wherein a conclusion is drawn from premises that do not really support it.
- Fallacy of False Cause, or Non Sequitur (L., it does not follow), wherein one thing is incorrectly assumed as the cause of another, as when the ancients attributed a public calamity to a meteorological phenomenon (a special case of this fallacy also goes by the Latin term post hoc ergo propter hoc; the fallacy of believing that temporal succession implies a causal relation).
- Fallacy of Many Questions (Plurium Interrogationum), wherein several questions are improperly grouped in the form of one, and a direct categorical answer is demanded, e.g. if a prosecuting counsel asked the prisoner " What time was it when you met this man? " with the intention of eliciting the tacit admission that such a meeting had taken place. Another example is the classic line, "Is it true that you no longer beat your wife?"
[edit] Verbal fallacies
Verbal fallacies are those in which a false conclusion is obtained by improper or ambiguous use of words. They are generally classified as follows.
- Equivocation consists in employing the same word in two or more senses, e.g. in a syllogism, the middle term being used in one sense in the major and another in the minor premise, so that in fact there are four not three terms ("All fair things are honourable; This woman is fair; therefore this woman is honourable," the second "fair" being in reference to complexion).
- Amphibology is the result of ambiguity of grammatical structure, e.g. of the position of the adverb "only" in careless writers ("He only said that," in which sentence, as experience shows, the adverb has been intended to qualify any one of the other three words).
- Fallacy of Composition is a species of Amphibology that results from the confused use of collective terms. e.g. "The angles of a triangle are less than two right angles" might refer to the angles separately or added together.
- Division, the converse of the preceding, which consists in employing the middle term distributively in the minor and collectively in the major premise.
- Proof by verbosity, sometimes colloquially referred to as argumentum verbosium - a rhetorical technique that tries to persuade by overwhelming those considering an argument with such a volume of material that the argument sounds plausible, superficially appears to be well-researched, and it is so laborious to untangle and check supporting facts that the argument might be allowed to slide by unchallenged.
- Accent, which occurs only in speaking and consists of emphasizing the wrong word in a sentence. e.g., "He is a fairly good pianist," according to the emphasis on the words, may imply praise of a beginner's progress, or an expert's depreciation of a popular hero, or it may imply that the person in question is a deplorable violinist.
- Figure of Speech, the confusion between the metaphorical and ordinary uses of a word or phrase.
[edit] Logical fallacies
The standard Aristotelian logical fallacies are:
- Fallacy of Four Terms (Quaternio terminorum)
- Fallacy of Undistributed Middle
- Fallacy of Illicit process of the major or the Illicit minor term;
- Fallacy of Negative Premises.
In philosophy, the term logical fallacy properly refers to a formal fallacy : a flaw in the structure of a deductive argument which renders the argument invalid.
However, it is often used more generally in informal discourse to mean an argument which is problematic for any reason, and thus encompasses informal fallacies as well as formal fallacies. – valid but unsound claims or bad nondeductive argumentation – .
The presence of a formal fallacy in a deductive argument does not imply anything about the argument's premises or its conclusion (see fallacy fallacy). Both may actually be true, or even more probable as a result of the argument (e.g. appeal to authority), but the deductive argument is still invalid because the conclusion does not follow from the premises in the manner described. By extension, an argument can contain a formal fallacy even if the argument is not a deductive one; for instance an inductive argument that incorrectly applies principles of probability or causality can be said to commit a formal fallacy.
[edit] Other systems of classification
Of other classifications of fallacies in general the most famous are those of Francis Bacon and J. S. Mill. Bacon (Novum Organum, Aph. 33, 38 sqq.) divided fallacies into four Idola (Idols, i.e. False Appearances), which summarize the various kinds of mistakes to which the human intellect is prone. With these should be compared the Offendicula of Roger Bacon, contained in the Opus maius, pt. i. J. S. Mill discussed the subject in book v. of his Logic, and Jeremy Bentham's Book of Fallacies (1824) contains valuable remarks. See Rd. Whateley's Logic, bk. v.; A. de Morgan, Formal Logic (1847) ; A. Sidgwick, Fallacies (1883) and other textbooks.
[edit] Fallacies in the media and politics
Fallacies are used frequently by pundits in the media and politics. When one politician says to another, "You don't have the moral authority to say X", this could be an example of the argumentum ad hominem or personal attack fallacy; that is, attempting to disprove X, not by addressing validity of X but by attacking the person who asserted X. Arguably, the politician is not even attempting to make an argument against X, but is instead offering a moral rebuke against the interlocutor. For instance, if X is the assertion:
- The military uniform is a symbol of national strength and honor.
Then ostensibly, the politician is not trying to prove the contrary assertion. If this is the case, then there is no logically fallacious argument, but merely a personal opinion about moral worth. Thus identifying logical fallacies may be difficult and dependent upon context.
In the opposite direction is the fallacy of argument from authority. A classic example is the ipse dixit—"He himself said it" argument—used throughout the Middle Ages in reference to Aristotle. A modern instance is "celebrity spokespersons" in advertisements: a product is good and you should buy/use/support it because your favorite celebrity endorses it.
An appeal to authority is always a logical fallacy, though it can be an appropriate form of rational argument if, for example, it is an appeal to expert testimony. In this case, the expert witness must be recognized as such and all parties must agree that the testimony is appropriate to the circumstances. This form of argument is common in legal situations.
By definition, arguments with logical fallacies are invalid, but they can often be (re)written in such a way that they fit a valid argument form. The challenge to the interlocutor is, of course, to discover the false premise, i.e. the premise that makes the argument unsound.
[edit] General list of fallacies:
Common logical fallacy examples:
- formal fallacies
- Argument from fallacy "ad logicam"
- Affirming the consequent or Denying the antecedent
- Faulty generalization Inductive fallacies like
- Biased sample
- Hasty generalization (also called fallacy of insufficient statistics, fallacy of insufficient sample, fallacy of the lonely fact, leaping to a conclusion, hasty induction, secundum quid)
- Misleading vividness
- Package-deal fallacy or False dilemma (also called false dichotomy or bifurcation)
- Questionable cause Informal causal fallacies (also called non causa pro causa)
- Begging the question, circular logic "petitio principii"
- Correlation implies causation "Cum hoc ergo propter hoc"
- Post hoc ergo propter hoc
- Appeal to consequences "ad consequentiam"
- Appeal to force "Ad baculum"
- Appeal to probability & Slippery slope
- Informal Relevance fallacies
- Irrelevant conclusion "Ignoratio elenchi" like Red Herring
- Straw man
- Association fallacy & Guilt by association
- Ad hoc
- Argument from ignorance, incredulity, belief, conviction... "ad ignorantiam"
- Appeal to emotion like Appeal to fear, Appeal to flattery, Appeal to pity, Appeal to spite...
- Wishful thinking
- Appeal to authority or Appeal to ridicule "Ad hominem"
- Appeal to the majority "ad populum"
- Appeal to tradition "ad antiquitatem"
- Informal Verbal fallacies
For a concise list of "appeal to" fallacies, see Appeal (disambiguation).
General list of fallacies: The entries in the following list are neither exhaustive nor mutually exclusive; that is, several distinct entries may refer to the same pattern. As noted in the introduction, these fallacies describe erroneous or at least suspect patterns of argument in general, not necessarily argument based on formal logic. Many of the fallacies listed are traditionally recognized and discussed in works on critical thinking; others are more specialized.
- Appeal to novelty (also called argumentum ad novitatem)
- Argument from silence (also called argumentum ex silentio)
- Appeal to wealth (also called argumentum ad crumenam)
- Appeal to poverty (also called argumentum ad lazarum)
- Argument from repetition (also called argumentum ad nauseam)
- Potent directors fallacy - a common example would be any popular press article on Macroeconomics which asserts or (more often, merely) assumes that the US Fed has learned to control our money and our economy.
- Base rate fallacy
- Conditional probability fallacy
- Conjunction fallacy
- Continuum fallacy (also called fallacy of the beard)
- Correlative based fallacies including:
- Fallacy of many questions (also called complex question, fallacy of presupposition, loaded question or plurium interrogationum)
- Denying the correlative
- Suppressed correlative
- Definist fallacy
- Dicto simpliciter, including:
- Accident (also called a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid)
- Converse accident (also called a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter)
- Fallacies of distribution:
- Composition
- Division
- Ecological fallacy
- False analogy
- False attribution
- False premise
- False compromise
- Faulty generalization including:
- Gambler's fallacy/Inverse gambler's fallacy
- Genetic fallacy
- Historian's fallacy
- Homunculus fallacy
- If-by-whiskey (argues both sides)
- Inappropriate interpretations or applications of statistics including:
- Incomplete comparison
- Inconsistent comparison
- Invalid proof
- Judgmental language
- Juxtaposition
- Lump of labour fallacy (also called the fallacy of labour scarcity)
- Meaningless statement
- Middle ground (also called argumentum ad temperantiam)
- Naturalistic fallacy
- Negative proof
- Non sequitur like Affirming the consequent, also including its opposite
- Perfect solution fallacy
- Poisoning the well
- Proof by assertion
- Proof by verbosity (also called argumentum verbosium)
- Questionable cause (also called non causa pro causa) including:
- Reification (also called hypostatization)
- Relativist fallacy (also called subjectivist fallacy)
- Restricted Universalism, Fallacy of
- Retrospective determinism (it happened so it was bound to)
- Shifting the burden of proof
- Special pleading
- Style over substance fallacy
- Sunk cost fallacy
- Syllogistic fallacies, including:
- Affirming a disjunct
- Affirmative conclusion from a negative premise
- Existential fallacy
- Fallacy of exclusive premises
- Fallacy of four terms (also called quaternio terminorum)
- Illicit major & Illicit minor
[edit] General examples
Fallacious arguments involve not only formal logic but also causality. Others involve psychological ploys such as use of power relationships between proposer and interlocutor, appeals to patriotism and morality, appeals to ego etc., to establish necessary intermediate (explicit or implicit) premises for an argument. Indeed, fallacies very often lay in unstated assumptions or implied premises in arguments that are not always obvious at first glance. One way to obscure a premise is through enthymeme.
We now give a few examples illustrating common errors in reasoning. Note that providing a critique of an argument has no relation to the truth of the conclusion. The conclusion could very well be true, while the argument itself is not valid. See argument from fallacy.
In the following, we view an argument as a dialogue between a proposer and an interlocutor.
[edit] Example 1: Material Fallacy
James argues:
- Cheese is food.
- Food is delicious.
- Therefore, cheese is delicious.
This argument claims to prove that cheese is delicious. This particular argument has the form of a categorical syllogism. Any argument must have premises as well as a conclusion. In this case we need to ask what the premises are, that is the set of assumptions the proposer of the argument can expect the interlocutor to grant. The first assumption is almost true by definition: cheese is a foodstuff edible by humans. The second assumption is less clear as to its meaning. Since the assertion has no quantifiers of any kind, it could mean any one of the following:
- All food is delicious.
- Most food is delicious.
- To me, all food is delicious.
- Some food is disgusting.
In all but the first interpretation, the above syllogism would then fail to have validated its second premise. James may try to assume that his interlocutor believes that all food is delicious; if the interlocutor grants this then the argument is valid. In this case, the interlocutor is essentially conceding the point to James. However, the interlocutor is more likely to believe that some food is disgusting, such as a sheep's liver white chocolate torte; and in this case James is not much better off than he was before he formulated the argument, since he now has to prove the assertion that cheese is a unique type of universally delicious food, which is a disguised form of the original thesis. From the point of view of the interlocutor, James commits the logical fallacy of begging the question.
[edit] Example 2: Verbal Fallacy
Barbara argues:
- Andre is a good tennis player.
- Therefore, Andre is 'good', that is to say a morally good person.
Here the problem is that the word good has different meanings, which is to say that it is an ambiguous word. In the premise, Barbara says that Andre is good at some particular activity, in this case tennis. In the conclusion, she says that Andre is a morally good person. These are clearly two different senses of the word "good". The premise might be true but the conclusion can still be false: Andre might be the best tennis player in the world but a rotten person morally. However, it is not legitimate to infer he is a bad person on the ground there has been a fallacious argument on the part of Barbara. Nothing concerning Andre's moral qualities is to be inferred from the premise. Appropriately, since it plays on an ambiguity, this sort of fallacy is called the fallacy of equivocation, that is, equating two incompatible terms or claims.
[edit] Example 3: Verbal Fallacy
Ramesh argues:
- Nothing is better than eternal happiness.
- Eating a hamburger is better than nothing.
- Therefore, eating a hamburger is better than eternal happiness.
This argument has the appearance of an inference that applies transitivity of the two-placed relation is better than, which in this critique we grant is a valid property. The argument is an example of syntactic ambiguity. In fact, the first premise semantically does not predicate an attribute of the subject, as would for instance the assertion
- A potato is better than eternal happiness.
In fact it is semantically equivalent to the following universal quantification:
- Everything fails to be better than eternal happiness.
So instantiating this fact with eating a hamburger, it logically follows that
- Eating a hamburger fails to be better than eternal happiness.
Note that the premise A hamburger is better than nothing does not provide anything to this argument. This fact really means something such as
- Eating a hamburger is better than eating nothing at all.
Thus this is a fallacy of composition.
[edit] Example 4: Logical Fallacy
In the strictest sense, a logical fallacy is the incorrect application of a valid logical principle or an application of a nonexistent principle:
- Some drivers are men.
- Some drivers are women.
- Therefore, some drivers are both men and women.
This is fallacious. And so is this:
- The average family has 2.5 children.
- The Smiths are a very average family.
- therefore, the Smiths must have 2.5 children.
Indeed, there is no logical principle that states
- For some x, P(x).
- For some x, Q(x).
- Therefore for some x, P(x) and Q(x).
An easy way to show the above inference is invalid is by using Venn diagrams. In logical parlance, the inference is invalid, since under at least one interpretation of the predicates it is not validity preserving.
[edit] See also
- Attacking Faulty Reasoning
- Anecdotal evidence
- Apophasis
- Cogency
- Cognitive bias
- Demagogy
- Fallacy
- Fallacies of definition
- False statement
- Informal logic
- Invalid proof
- Paradox
- Sophism
- Soundness
- Spurious relationship
- Validity
- Vacuous truth
[edit] References
- Aristotle, On Sophistical Refutations, De Sophistici Elenchi.
- William of Ockham, Summa of Logic (ca. 1323) Part III.4.
- John Buridan, Summulae de dialectica Book VII.
- Francis Bacon, the doctrine of the idols in Novum Organum Scientiarum, Aphorisms concerning The Interpretation of Nature and the Kingdom of Man, XXIIIff.
- The Art of Controversy | Die Kunst, Recht zu behalten - The Art Of Controversy (bilingual), by Arthur Schopenhauer
- John Stuart Mill, A System of Logic - Raciocinative and Inductive. Book 5, Chapter 7, Fallacies of Confusion.
- C. L. Hamblin, Fallacies. Methuen London, 1970.
- Fearnside, W. Ward and William B. Holther, Fallacy: The Counterfeit of Argument, 1959.
- Vincent F. Hendricks, Thought 2 Talk: A Crash Course in Reflection and Expression, New York: Automatic Press / VIP, 2005, ISBN 87-991013-7-8
- D. H. Fischer, Historians' Fallacies: Toward a Logic of Historical Thought, Harper Torchbooks, 1970.
- Douglas N. Walton, Informal logic: A handbook for critical argumentation. Cambridge University Press, 1989.
- F. H. van Eemeren and R. Grootendorst, Argumentation, Communication and Fallacies: A Pragma-Dialectical Perspective, Lawrence Erlbaum and Associates, 1992.
- Warburton Nigel, Thinking from A to Z, Routledge 1998.
- T. Edward Damer. Attacking Faulty Reasoning, 5th Edition, Wadsworth, 2005. ISBN 0-534-60516-8
[edit] External links
- Logical Fallacies-a semi ordered list with definitions
- The Fallacy Files by Gary N. Curtis - real examples posted regularly.
- Fallacies - ESGS. Europeean Society for General Semantics
- Logical Fallacies .Info
- Bruce Thompson's Fallacy Page
- Stephen Downes Guide to the Logical Fallacies
- Logical Fallacies and the Art of Debate
- Logical Fallacies Quiz Ten common fallicies in an interactive test format.
- Humbug! Online List of fallacies with links to real examples - posted regularly.
- 42 informal logical fallacies explained by Dr. Michael C. Labossiere, including examples.
- How to spot a bad argument - entertaining description of logical fallacies.
- On Informal Fallacies is a collection of one-off fallacies coined for specific, rhetorical purposes.
- The Non Sequitur explores fallacious reasoning in the American political media.