Title: Informal Logic, Famous Fallacies
1Informal Logic, Famous Fallacies
- Dont Be Fooled by Bad Arguments
2First, what are arguments?
- Distinguish arguments from explanations
- Arguments are the assertion of a conclusion from
reasons that are better known than the
conclusion. - Explanations are the assertion of reasons for a
conclusion that is better known than those
reasons.
3Classification of Fallacies
- Fallacies of Relevance
- Appeal to Force
- Appeal to Pity
- Appeal to the People
- Ad Hominem
- Accident
- Straw man
- Missing the Point
- Red Herring
Weak Induction Appeal to Unqualified
Authority Appeal to Ignorance Hasty
Generalization False Cause Slippery Slope Weak
Analogy
Fallacies of Ambiguity Equivocation Amphibole
Fallacies of Presumption Begging the
Question Complex Question Faulty Dilemma
Fallacies of Grammatical Analogy Composition Divi
sion
48 Fallacies of Relevance
- 1. Appeal to Force (ad Baculum appeal to the
stick) - Supporting or avoiding a conclusion by threats
- Worst case when debates get derailed by jeering
or shouting down an arguer. - I think we should choose xBox over Playstation
because its online multiplayer stuff is better. - How about I stomp your guts out? How would that
be? - Committing Appeal to Force is less an error in
reasoning, more a bullying tactic. Either way,
the response is irrelevant to the quality of the
argument or idea.
5Fallacies of Relevance, cont.
- 2. Appeal to Pity (Argumentum ad Misericordiam)
- Im afraid going 70 in a 25mph zone means you
deserve this ticket, Ms. Garcia. - No, Judge, I have three kids, late bills, and
work two jobs I cant deserve this speeding
ticket! - Is the sorry state of the arguer logically
relevant to deserving the ticket? - Might the judge considering it in sentencing?
6Fallacies of Relevance, cont.
- 3. Appeal to the People (Argumentum ad Populum)
- Ad Populum has the form
- X is popular
- X is true
- Direct Approach appeal directly to the crowd of
people use emotive language to create mob
mentality support for a conclusion. Political
speeches? - Indirect Approach appeal to indirectly to the
crowd by appealing directly to individuals and
their relationship to the crowd also called a
Bandwagon Argument - Come on everyone in this class smokes crack
... you should take a hit!
Individual
crowd
7Fallacies of Relevance, cont.
- 4. Argument to the Person (Argumentum ad
Hominem) Attacking the arguer instead of their
argument. - Famous response to an ad hominem attack
- I may be the devils brother,
- but you still havent answered my argument.
- 3 Kinds of ad Hominem arguments
- Abusive ad Hominem
- I believe murderers should die for the sake of
their victims family. - Only a stupid jerk-face would want anyone to
die! - does the speaker being a jerk have anything to
do with whether capital punishment is justified
based on concern for the victims family?
8Fallacies of Relevance, cont.
- Circumstantial ad Hominem
- I believe murderers should die for the sake of
the victims family. - Well, since your cousin was murdered, it isnt
hard to see why you feel that way. - Tu Quoque (you too)
- I believe murderers should die for the sake of
the victims family. - Well, I recall you defending your Uncle when he
was convicted you werent suggesting he die for
the family of the guy he shot!
9Fallacies of Relevance, cont.
- 5. Accident (Misapplying a Rule)
- Yes I told the axe murderer where the little
girl was! if you check your bible, youll find
Thou Shalt Not Lie
10Fallacies of Relevance, cont.
- 6. Straw Man (Straw Position)
- Famous quote
- If the defendant be a
- man of straw,
- who is to pay the penalty?
- Distorting your opponents view or position by
exaggerating or diminishing it, then attacking
the distorted position rather than the one the
opponent holds. - Universal health care?! Well thats just plain,
old-fashioned Communism! (exaggeration) - Intelligent Design? Well, thats just plain old
churchy creationism! (diminishment)
11Fallacies of Relevance, cont.
- 7. Missing the Point
- So, you say Bill punched Bob in the nose? All
right, better get Bob straight to the emergency
room! - Sometimes MtP is jumping to a distant conclusion.
- Sometimes MtP is just missing the point.
- Thats a priceless Steinway!
- Not anymore. http//www.youtube.com/watch?vLwtI
KdCWXls - If youre not out of here in 5 seconds!
- Ah, I could easily be out of here in three!
12Fallacies of Relevance, cont.
- 8. Red Herring
- Leading listeners off track with a related,
enticing or distracting line of thought. - I dont think God exists. To me, theres just
too much evil in the world to believe that. - Ah. Yes, evil is bad. But the best way to handle
it, if it upsets you, is to seek out a therapist,
or perhaps pastoral care. Therapy has been shown
to work wonders I dont see why you would avoid
it see you in church!
13Quick Quiz
- We should give that new position to Frank
Thompson. Frank has six hungry kids to feed, and
his wife needs an operation to save her eyesight.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
14Quick Quiz
- Professor Pearsons arguments in favor of the
theory of evolution should be discounted. Pearson
is a cocaine-snorting sex pervert and, according
to some reports, a member of the communist party.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
15Quick Quiz
- Some of you oppose the appointment of David Cole
as new sales manager. Upon further consideration,
I am sure you will find him suitable for the job.
If not confirmed, it may be necessary to make
severe personnel cutbacks in your department.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
16Quick Quiz
- You should read Irving Stones latest novel right
away. It has sold over a million copies, and
nearly everyone in the Manhattan cocktail circuit
is talking about it.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
17Quick Quiz
- Animal rights activists say that animals are
abused in biomedical research labs. But consider
this Pets are abused by their owners every day.
Probably 25 percent of pet owners should never
get near animals. Some cases of abuse are enough
to make you sick!
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
18Quick Quiz
- Actress Andie MacDowell says that its healthy to
drink milk. But the dairy industry pays MacDowell
thousands of dollars to make these ads.
Therefore, we shouldnt take her testimonials too
seriously.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
19Quick Quiz
- Dr. Morrison has argued that smoking is
responsible for the majority of health problems
in this country and that every smoker concerned
about his or her health should quit.
Unfortunately, however, we must consign Dr.
Morrisons argument to the trash bin. Only
yesterday I saw none other than Dr. Morrison
himself smoking a cigar.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
20Fallacies of Weak Induction
- 9. Appeal to Unqualified Authority (ad
Verecundiam) - My Econ professor said to never scold my dog,
so, now Im a 100 positive feedback dog
trainer. - A PhD in Economics doesnt imply dog training
skill. - 2 things
- Perhaps the Econ professor is a dog training
expert but that has to be shown. - In some areas, no one is an expert famously,
- politics,
- morals, and
- religion
21Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- 10. Appeal to Ignorance (ad Ignorantiam)
- Arguing from a lack of knowledge
- No one has proven X true, (or false)
- X is false (or true)
- As in
- No one has proven God exists.
- Is that so?
- Yes! So, God does not exist!
- No one as proven God doesnt exist.
- Is that so?
- Yes! So, God exists!
22Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- Appeal to Ignorance, cont.
- Exceptions (below are good arguments (pretty
good)) - Guys innocent.
- Says who?
- Well, he hasnt been proven guilty, so he is
innocent. - There is no crocodile in the hall.
- Says who?
- Well, no one has proven theres a crocodile in
the hall, so there isnt.
23Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- 11. Hasty Generalization (Converse Accident)
- Taking a small sample, and inferring from it all
or most of that kind are the same. - My cabbie in New York City was surly, so, all
cabbies in NYC are surly. - Exceptions
- This Root Beer, Roundys, is blah, so all
Roundys Root Beer is blah. - This Pit Bull (Rottweiler, Tarantula, Python,
etc.) is dangerous, so, all Pit Bulls
(Rottweilers, Tarantulas, Pythons, etc.) are
dangerous.
24Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- Two more things regarding the logic of danger
(2) - When people say Pit Bulls, for instance, are
dangerous, they plainly dont mean to include
dead ones, very old ones, very young ones. Their
statement is perhaps elliptical for, these
healthy adult dogs can kill you and animals are
unpredictable. Be on guard! You must decide if a
statement is straight-forward or elliptical based
on context, knowledge of the speaker, or by
asking, if possible. - Risk assessment logic Risk assessments have 2
parts - probability and,
- severity.
- Some things have very low probabilities of harm,
but are dangerous because of high severity.
Commonly believed dangerous things - your weird looking neighbor,
- flying in a commercial jet,
- driving a car without a seatbelt,
- playing just one round of Russian Roulette,
- hitchhiking.
- All have very low probabilities of harm. How then
are they dangerous?
25Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- 12. False Cause (3 Kinds)
- 1. False Cause Post Hoc
-
- Post hoc, ergo, propter hoc
- After this, therefore, because of this
- Ever since Betty showed up its been one thing
after the other, car breaks down, dog dies, TV on
the fritz! Clearly, Betty is bad news! - Right about the time Obama took office the
economy really took a dive. I guess we know that
guy is bad for business! - While Reagan was taking office Iran freed the
hostages. Plain to see he knew how to take care
of business!
Post Hoc
26Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- 2. False Cause Mere Contributive Cause
(oversimplified cause) - A Contributive Cause one cause that is
insufficient, by itself, to produce the effect in
question, but that contributes to producing the
effect. - Edgar hung himself while listening to Suicide
Solution by Ozzy Osbourne Ozzy should go to
jail for causing his suicide. - How might you, as a defense attorney, using the
notion of a contributive cause, argue that this
conclusion is fallacious?
27Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- 3. False Cause Confused Causal Chains
- Suppose we conclude that a dog was barking
because someone broke into its house an intruder
(X) caused the dog to bark (Y), X caused Y
couldnt it be - Y caused X (someone intruded because the dog was
barking)? - Y caused a fire Z, which caused X (dog barking
caused someone to start a fire, and the fire made
someone break into the house)? - X had nothing to do with Y (the dog was barking
at a mouse intruder broke in to steal a TV)? - Others?
28Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- 13. Slippery Slope
- If we allow gay marriage, how do we keep from
allowing - polygamy, and then
- polyamory, then
- sibling and parent marriage, then
- pet marriage?
- We will slide down the slope into chaos!
- Show the slope really is slippery
- history
- statistics
- motives
29Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- Slippery Slope, cont.
- Throwing sand on a slippery slope
- Cite the differences between the case at hand the
next step in the slope, or at each step try to
show, for instance, that -
- jealousy makes polygamous marriages unstable, or
that - rich men getting 20 wives harms society by
shrinking the family opportunities of poor men - so, we surely wont slide down the slope?
30Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- 14. Weak Analogy
- A has a, b, c, and z
- B has a, b, c
- So, B probably has z. (this is the form of an
analogy, - not a weak analogy)
- National 65 mph speed limit kills 42,000 US
citizens per year, - and no one minds much.
- The war in Iraq kills 1,000 US soldiers a year
- So, no one should mind that much either.
a
A
z
a
B
z
31Fallacies of Weak Induction, cont.
- To evaluate the analogy, we have to compare every
relevant feature we can think of between the
national speed limit and the war in Iraq, and see
if those features strengthen or weaken the
analogy. - Are both government policies?
- Do they serve worthy goals?
- Do the policies put each group at equal risk?
- Does risk matter, or just total lives lost?
- Can society survive without either policy?
- Can those endangered opt out of the policys
purview? - Who are the relevant dead of each policy?
- Are injuries equally bad?
- So on
32Quick Quiz
- If you give Jane a cookie, shell want a glass of
milk. Then, she wont be hungry for her supper!
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
33Quick Quiz
- Dont listen to Rush Limbaugh. After Bob started
listening, he developed an ulcer.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
34Quick Quiz
- Ellen is a mean drunk. I wouldnt invite her to
your kegger, if I were you.
35Quick Quiz
- No one would buy a pair of shoes without trying
them on. Why should anyone be expected to get
married without first having sex?
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
36Quick Quiz
- There are more churches in New York City than in
any other city in the nation, and more crimes
committed in New York City than anywhere else.
So, if we are to eliminate crime, we must abolish
churches.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
37Quick Quiz
- Probably no life exists on Venus. Teams of
scientists have conducted exhaustive studies on
the planets surface and atmosphere, and no
living organisms have been found.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic
38Quick Quiz
- We dont dare let animal rights activists get
their foot in the door. If they sell us on the
idea that dogs, cats, and dolphins have rights,
next it will be chickens and cows. Next, it will
be worms and insects. This will lead to the
decimation of our agricultural industry. The
starvation of the human race will follow close
behind.
from Hurleys A Concise Introduction to Logic