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Appeal to Authority

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Diversity of available scripture, both between and within religious traditions ... questionable, relationship between God and humanity: one of profound inequality ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Appeal to Authority


1
Appeal to Authority
  • Appeal to someone as an authority in areas where
    they lack relevant expertise (either by appealing
    to someone with no recognizable expertise, or
    appealing to someone outside their area of
    expertise).
  • Be on the lookout for experts that nevertheless
    have recognizable biases in the area in question.

2
Appeal to AuthoritySocial Norms, Customs, and
Law
  • All of these may be vague or be in conflict with
    each other
  • There is diversity both between and within
    cultures
  • Any of these could be the product of bias,
    prejudice and preconceptions
  • All of these are open to revision

3
Ad Populum Fallacy
  • Appeal to mass belief, mass sentiment or mass
    commitment
  • Fallacious because none of these are relevant to
    considering whether a claim is true
  • False Consensus presentation of a controversial
    view as if it has received general consensus

4
Appeal to Authority God
  • Diversity of available scripture, both between
    and within religious traditions
  • Scripture does not always carry its meaning on
    its faceinterpretation is always involved.
    (This could include changes in the meaning of
    certain terms.) Even literalism is an
    interpretation.
  • We tend to lift scriptural passages out of
    context if they say what we want.
  • We tend to be selectively obedient to the
    passages that support what we already believe.
  • There is evidence that scriptures have been
    editorially revised over the yearssome of these
    may be morally significant.

5
Appeal to Authority God (contd)
  • Our western religious scriptures themselves have
    passages that present humans as co-creators and
    present arguing with God as legitimate.
  • Appeals to God rely on a common, but
    questionable, idea about the relationship between
    God and humanity one of profound inequality that
    calls for obedience on our part.

6
Ad Hominem
  • Literally against the man
  • Replaces evaluation of ideas or evidence with a
    critique of some irrelevant characteristic of the
    person whose beliefs or evidence they are
  • Ad Hominem Circumstantial group-based version of
    the ad Hominem
  • Personal attacks are not fallacious if they are
    relevant to evaluating such things as the
    reliability of ones evidence

7
Straw Man
  • Deliberate misrepresentation of an opposing
    viewpoint distorts or caricatures for ease of
    refutation
  • Look for attributions of extreme views this is a
    red flag for a Straw Man
  • Look for attributions of absurd views this is a
    red flag for a Straw Man
  • Different from a Reductio argument, which tries
    to show that an opponents viewpoint leads to
    patently false or absurd conclusions

8
Hasty Generalization
  • Hasty Generalizations occur when an inference is
    made from a small or atypical sample. Not all
    fallacious generalizations are HASTY
    generalizations.
  • This results in a misrepresentation of the actual
    data
  • Use of single case studies and single examples
    tends to lead to hasty generalizations

9
Availability Bias
  • We tend to overestimate how likely an event is to
    occur based on how easy it is to recall to memory
  • Events that are startling, emotionally evocative
    or otherwise salient will be recalled easier
  • This helps to create hasty generalizations

10
Confirmation Bias
  • Our tendency to search out confirming evidence
    and ignore possible disconfirming evidence
  • Includes our tendency to treat disconfirming
    evidence more critically than confirming evidence
  • This tends to reinforce hasty generalizations

11
Fallacy of Misleading Vividness
  • Overlooking strong evidence due to a salient
    counterexamplebasically, rejecting a
    generalization on the basis of a small or
    atypical example
  • statistics

12
Begging the Question (Circularity)
  • Directly circular reasoning (Begging the
    Question) assumes what it is out to prove the
    evidence already assumes the truth of the
    conclusion
  • Indirectly circular reasoning appeals to evidence
    that would only be accepted by those who are
    already in agreement with your conclusion the
    evidence is controversial but not treated as such
  • Question-begging arguments are unsalvageable,
    indirectly circular arguments are notthey call
    for MORE argumentation

13
Slippery Slope
  • Predictive story without supporting evidence, or
    where the only evidence is common sense
  • Connections in the story are assumed, not
    demonstrated
  • Can be progressive (if we just do X, all these
    great things will happen!) or gloom-and-doom (if
    we do X, the sky will fall!)
  • Related to Golden Age Fallacy (things were so
    much better in the past) and Utopian Fallacy
    (things are so much better than they once were)

14
Slippery Slope continued
  • Predictive stories are never more certain than
    their first step
  • This is because with each additional step in the
    story that isnt CERTAIN, the likelihood that the
    whole story is true DECREASES
  • The irony the features that make a slippery
    slope a good story undermine the likelihood of
    the storys truth

15
Bifurcation (aka False Dichotomy False Dilemma)
  • Artificial limitation of options typically to 2
  • Often linked to other fallacies
  • Brainstorming as a way to overcome bifurcation
  • Value Dichotomies WE value x, while THEY dont
  • Commonality and compromise are ways to overcome
    value dichotomies
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