Fallicious Arguments

by Jang 1 Replies latest jw friends

  • Jang
    Jang

    We learnt well as JW's to used fallicious argument techniques. This article shows you how it is done and helps you understand it.

    See if you can identify the fallacies used in the WTS magazines etc.

    Fallacious Arguments

    ** Begging the Question: assumes conclusion in the premise
    ** Argument From Analogy: links an unfamiliar thing to a familiar
    thing in order to emphasize similarities…when it ignores
    dissimilarities, it is a fallacy
    ** Argument Ad Hominem: attacks person, not issue
    ** Hasty Generalization: bases conclusion on small amount of evidence
    ** False Dilemma (Either/Or): creates an either/or situation where
    none exists
    ** Equivocation: changes key term during discussion to support an
    argument
    ** Red Herring: pulls discussion away from issue at hand by
    introducing new focus
    ** Tu Quoque (You Also): proposes that the member of the opposition
    does not practice what he/she preaches, so the argument must be
    invalid
    ** Appeal to Doubtful Authority: uses a celebrity or non-expert
    as an authority
    ** Misleading Statistics: manipulates statistics to influence
    audience
    ** Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc (After This, Therefore Because of
    This): suggests cause-and-effect relationship between two things
    occuring closely together.
    ** Non Sequitur (It Does Not Follow): fails to provide transition
    between ideas, so that the second statement does not logically
    follow the first

    For each sentence below, name the fallacy that best describes the argument?

    1. When asked about the effects of television viewing on young children, Dan Rather said, "It's a positive thing because children become more informed."

    2. No one could blame her for quitting her job after she won the lottery.

    3. As a nation, we must choose between vegetarian and carnivorous lifestyles. There can be no middle ground.

    4. How can that judge advocate lower speed limits? He has been caught speeding!

    5. Since aerobics reduces stress and raises levels of fitness, everyone should do aerobics.

    6. The parking downtown has turned people into animals of prey: we hunt our spots ferociously, circling hungrily until we see a place to pounce; we don't hesitate to fight for a space. Therefore, we need to build a new parking garage near Coors Field.

    7. People drive to work every day. Increased patronage at fast food places should be halted.

    8. The human race depends upon oxygen for survival. How human can we be if we are forming companies and selling oxygen in bars for profit?

    9. Of all people surveyed, 80% felt that Bugs Bunny would be a great president.

    10. The dangerous road conditions are clearly a problem for Denver residents.

    Fallacies

    A fallacy is an unsound argument, based on false notions, logical errors, or deceit. All forms of argument is plagued by fallacious reasoning. Those who commit logical fallacies in their reasoning and rhetoric can confuse and mislead (sometimes manipulate) their audience. Therefore, a major goal for every person should be the recognition of fallacious reasoning.

    An argument consists of a premise (or several premises) and a conclusion. A premise is a reason, an explanation, or a justification. If the premise is part of a logical argument, it
    provides supporting data or evidence that leads the audience to the
    conclusion. The conclusion of the argument is that with which the
    speaker wants the listener to agree. It is only as compelling as is
    the premise from which it is derived. If the premise is well-constructed (usually meaning well-understood and factual), and
    if it logically leads to the conclusion, then the listener will have
    to accept the conclusion, and the speaker will have accomplished his
    or her goal. An argument can be attacked on the basis of its poor
    premise, or on the basis of its poor logical flow to the conclusion.
    In the latter case, an opponent can defeat an argument even if the
    opponent cannot verify the facts concerning the premise.

    One of the first of many philosophers to critique fallacies was Aristotle, who many have called the first political scientist. He
    and others have described a wide variety of fallacies, or non Sequiturs. A non sequitur is a conclusion that does not follow logically (it doesn't sequence) from the given premises. These
    fallacies can be grouped together in a variety of ways, due to the overlap and similarities among them. What follows is a list of thirteen types of fallacies, each with three examples concerning politics.

    (1) APPEAL TO FORCE: also called appeal to fear, it is an argument based on coercion alone. That is, power--rather than reasoning--determines the outcome. The most common response to such an argument is: "might does not make right".

    Examples:
    "If you don't vote for the Chair's bill, he will never let any of
    your bills out of his committee." "Those terrorists better wise up and see things our way, if they don't want us to bomb them." "The moral superiority of the Allied powers was proven by their victory over the Central Powers in WWI."

    (2) ABUSIVE AD HOMINEM: a personal attack on the opponent, rather than the ideas the opponent advocates. Ad hominem means "to the man". When arguments are lacking, many stoop to criticism or abuse of the person making an argument rather than the argument itself, something akin to killing the messenger of bad news. Of course, not all attacks on individuals' personal character are illogical--if that is the true point of the argument, to conclude that someone is a bad person

    (i.e., he steals, therefore he is bad). What makes a personal attack a fallacy is when it is a distraction from the real argument (i.e., he steals, therefore his ideas about China are wrong).

    Examples:
    "I don't agree that Senator Fogbottom's tax plan will increase revenues, because he is a cowardly wimp who always gives in to pressure from stupid welfare activists." "What does he know about
    infant malnutrition? From the size of his belly, I would guess he's never been hungry!" "Sure, I'll listen to your proposal for a state income tax--as soon as you learn how to balance your checkbook." (The
    implicit conclusion is that the tax proposal is bad; it is premised on the proponent's personal abilities.)

    (3) CIRCUMSTANTIAL AD HOMINEM: an appeal to prejudices and unfair stereotypes about the circumstances, or background, of the opponent, instead of the opponent's argument. Most forms of racism, sexism, and other prejudices fall into this category. Rather than a personal attack on the individual, the speaker indicts the entire group to which the individual belongs, as a distraction from the opponent's argument.

    Examples:
    "Judge Rebel is an old born-and-raised Southerner, so I knew his ruling would not be fair." "No, we shouldn't place women in combat,
    but I'm not surprised that you think that, since you're a woman." "I
    don't agree with his campaign proposals--he's just a rich lawyer who
    thinks he can buy a legislative seat."

    (4) APPEAL TO IGNORANCE: also called the fallacy of negative proof, it assumes that because an argument cannot be disproved, it must be true. Just because one cannot provide evidence that proves the speaker wrong does not make the speaker's argument valid. Many times
    a speaker will attempt to shift the burden of proof on a skeptical audience, when it rightly belongs with the person making the claim.
    If a person professes to be a Martian, it is not the listener's responsibility to prove that the speaker isn't, since the listener
    was making no such claims... The inability of the listener to disprove the claim is not evidence for the speaker's argument.

    Examples:
    "The Trilateral Commission, European bankers, and international communists are plotting and planning to conquer the world. Sure you haven't heard about it--it's a secret conspiracy!"
    "I support the Strategic Defense Initiative (Star Wars) program because I'm sure we can overcome any technical difficulties
    with it; it's only a matter of time until it's perfected. How do you know it won't be?"
    "If the President was telling the truth, then why did he refuse to take a lie-detector test?" (The implicit conclusion is that he lied, which one cannot disprove.)

    (5) APPEAL TO PITY: an attempt to use the audience's sympathy, concern, or possibly even guilty feelings about an unfortunate situation to overwhelm or suspend their logical reasoning. One may or may not choose to support compassionate public policy--it is certainly not "illogical" to do so. However, the audience should not allow the speaker to exploit their empathy for manipulative purposes.

    Examples:
    "What do you mean, 'we should reform the social security system'? Don't you care about those poor, lonely, old people,living on fixed incomes?"
    "Well, it's true that I took the bribe, but it's not like I'm a criminal, because I had a drinking problem at the time."
    "No, we don't need an investigation of the director for the homeless shelter program. These charges about fraud and corruption are being made by people who have no idea how terrible it is to be cold and hungry on the street!"

    (6) APPEAL TO THE PEOPLE: The rationalization that if most people
    believe it, it must be true.
    The fallacy is self-evident... in the past, almost everyone in Europe believed the world was flat, but
    that did not make it so. Quite often the majority is correct, so such an appeal may give credence to an argument--but does not prove it. It is perhaps democratic and fair to follow the will of the majority,but democracy does not ensure logical reasoning.

    Examples:
    "The Speaker is a criminal. According to a recent poll, 91% of the public said he broke the law."
    "You are so naive! Everyone knows the death penalty deters murders."
    "That party's platform is nonsense. Last election, none of their candidates won more than 3% of the vote."

    (7) APPEAL TO AUTHORITY: an argument based on the unstated reasoning or opinion of a supposed expert. Of course, there is nothing wrong with citing authorities, which may offer good advice, but it is also essential that the argument itself be explained. That is, in this fallacy, the speaker gives us only the authority's conclusion, without a premise we can question. The speaker is essentially using the authority's conclusion as his premise. This would be acceptable only if the authority's premise was also given. One might question the credentials of purported experts, but whether the authority is really knowledgeable or wise is not the primary issue. The fallacy lies in the failure of the speaker to actually provide the audience with an argument that can be critically examined.

    Examples:
    "We don't need more police stations. The mayor said just last week that we have enough."
    "I don't care what your textbook says. President Reagan said the
    'iron triangle' included Congress, special interests, and the press."
    "Why? Because I'm the judge, and I said so."

    (8) FALLACY OF ACCIDENT: inappropriately applying a general rule to a particular case, not allowing for the exceptional case. What is true in the general sense, or overall, is not necessarily true in
    every case, in all conditions, in every sense, etc.. If, when polled, 999 randomly-selected Texas women said they did not support the Libertarian Party, one could conclude that Libertarian support is probably very low and possibly nonexistent among Texas women. One
    could also predict a likely negative response from the 1000th respondent; however, one could not be certain that the 1000th respondent does not support the Libertarians. The 1000th woman might
    be the "accident", or exception, to the rule.

    Examples:
    "He is a Anglo Protestant millionaire investor, so I assume he is a Republican."
    "Judge Free ruled against the American Civil Liberties Union? That's impossible; I've watched him for years, and I know he is a great civil libertarian."
    "I don't believe that people in Kuwait are rich, because I hear all of the time how poverty-stricken the Third World countries are."

    (9) FALLACY OF CONVERSE ACCIDENT: overgeneralization; assuming that one case (or a few) explains the whole, or that what is true for a part is true for the whole. It is fallacious to create a general rule from one or a few cases because they may happen to be
    "accidents" (exceptional cases), i.e. not typical of the norm. Consider the following situation: Two people are facing a brick wall. One person is looking from across an alley; the other is an inch away from the wall. The bricks are brown, with the exception of a few red ones used to repair the wall. The first person does not notice the red bricks from a distance, and claims all of the bricks are brown. He has committed the fallacy of accident. A red brick is directly in front of the second person's eyes. He claims he is looking at a red wall, committing the fallacy of converse accident (overgeneralization).

    Examples:
    "My sister knows a legislator, and she told me about him.Politicians are all a bunch of crooks!"
    "If each and every interest group successfully promotes its agenda (gets what it wants), the whole country will be well-served, since interest groups represent all segments of society." (Each group wants more than its fair share.)
    "There will be no revolution; the people of this country are perfectly content with the way things are. I know, because I play
    polo with some of them every Sunday on my day off from the embassy."

    (10) BEGGING THE QUESTION: in most cases circular reasoning;using the conclusion to support a premise upon which the conclusion
    relies. In such arguments, there is no real premise, since it is really just a repeat of the conclusion. In other words, it prompts
    the listener to beg for the premise--the rationale for the conclusion.

    Examples:
    "The reason there's so many reports in the press about ethics and scandals is because the media is focusing on this issue."
    "Clearly, Iran is anti-American because they are hostile to U.S. interests and positions."
    "It is the duty of the United States to promote freedom around the world because we are obligated to support liberty."

    (11) FALLACY OF FALSE CAUSE: also called the post hoc fallacy, it incorrectly attributes a causal relationship--either because two events seem to occur at roughly the same time, or because one event follows another. In the first case the assumption of co-variation confuses cause and effect--both events might be effects of one or separate causes, rather than one causing the other. In the second case, the assumption that the second event is dependent upon the first is fallacious without proof. Even if the two are related, the conclusion may not be completely explained by the given premise.

    Examples:
    "Had we not built the B-1B bomber, Gorbachev would not have begun the process of economic and political reform."
    "The Governor ruined our economy. Before he took office, the petroleum industry was booming. Just look at it now."
    "Since the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling, which upheld abortion rights, there has been a great increase in reported child abuse. Therefore, the Supreme Court is responsible."

    (12) FALLACY OF THE COMPLEX QUESTION: A question which cannot be answered yes or no, because it assumes hostile premises that have
    not yet been proven.

    Examples:
    "Are you going to continue to cover up the Attorney General's investigation?" (a cover-up is assumed)
    "Why are you voting for that cultural exchange program with the cubans? Do you want them to come over here and brainwash our youth with their communist propaganda?"
    "When it becomes clear that your tax estimates are unrealistic, will they be revised then?"

    (13) IRRELEVANT CONCLUSION: offering a conclusion which is not germane (relevant) to the original premise. It is often a convincing premise, or a widely accepted fact, but it has nothing to do with the speaker's conclusion. Like a "red herring," or "slippery slope" argument, it diverts attention away from the real issue.

    Examples:
    "You say there is no money in the budget for a state monument to honor Texas' veterans? Yes, there is! They honorably served their country and they deserve a monument!" (The conclusion--that there is money in the budget--is not relevant to the question of their alleged honorable service, which is the premise. In other words, even if they were completely deserving, that fact alone does not put money into the budget for the monument. A better argument might suggest a redistribution of funds in the budget, perhaps by cutting another item.)

    "This concept of affirmative action is a dangerous idea. American
    corporations are not competitive in Japan." "Texas needs new sources
    of tax revenue, so I really don't think a lottery would attract
    organized crime or encourage addictive gambling." *Irrelevant conclusions are sometimes called "straw man" arguments. In such a case, the speaker's premise attacks a defenseless (like a scarecrow)
    proposition that is not really his opponent's argument. Example: "We
    do not live in a utopian world, therefore..." (The speaker offers a false alternative.)

    JanG
    CAIC Website: http://caic.org.au/zjws.htm
    Personal Webpage: http://uq.net.au/~zzjgroen/

  • bobsyone
    bobsyone

    I have seen these in the magazines

    ** Argument Ad Hominem: attacks person, not issue

    I have seen this here on the board too .... when some don't have anything to say they attack the person rather than give a good answer.

    ** Hasty Generalization: bases conclusion on small amount of evidence

    The Society does this all the time

    ** Red Herring: pulls discussion away from issue at hand by introducing new focus

    I didn't realize I was doing this until someone showed me .... it is part of 'theocratic strategy'

    ** Tu Quoque (You Also): proposes that the member of the opposition
    does not practice what he/she preaches, so the argument must be
    invalid

    Example: some people get drunk at Christmas which means that christmas must be bad just like we said.

    ** Appeal to Doubtful Authority: uses a celebrity or non-expert
    as an authority

    We only have to look at the Trinity brochure to see that ....

    Rather than a personal attack on the individual, the speaker indicts the entire group to which the individual belongs, as a distraction from the opponent's argument.

    And example of tis is some Catholics do the wrong thing which means that everything they teach must be wrong and evil ....

    Thankyou for posting this Jan. I am going to print it out and pass it around.....

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