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Pragmatic fallacy
Cogito ergo sum |
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Key articles |
General logic |
Bad logic |
Apragmatic fallacy is alogical fallacy that occurs when, because something helpedsomeone, it is assumed that it will help foreveryone.
The fallacy is the bastard child ofhasty generalization andanecdotal evidence; it is therefore aninformal fallacy.
The fallacy is sometimes confused with anappeal to consequences; this is incorrect. An appeal to consequences uses the effects of holding a belief to argue for the truth value of a proposition, while a pragmatic fallacy uses an example where something "worked" to argue for its general efficacy.
Alternate names[edit]
- It worked for me!
Form[edit]
- P1:X helped personY.
- P2: (unstated, often unconsidered) Things that work for personY work for everyone.
- C:X will help for everyone.
Explanation[edit]
The only way to know whether something is likely to work in all cases is to try it in a representative sample of all cases. (In medicine, usually viadouble blind studies.) One or two people arenot representative of the human race.
A big part of the fallacy is thevagueness of the term "works" — for some people,yoga "works" to make them happy, while for others, it "works" to bring them closer tobrahman. This vagueness is exploited bywoomeisters worldwide. Customer satisfaction is often used as an argument for a treatment's effectiveness, when it may be nothing more than aplacebo effect or their personalregression to the mean.
Examples[edit]
- Deepak Chopra was a successful doctor, yet overworked, over-caffeinated, and asmoker. After he practicedTranscendental Meditation, he lost some of these habits. Twenty years later, he's still preaching its benefits.
- I don't knowhow magnetic bracelets relieve pain, I just know that they do.
See also[edit]
External links[edit]
- pragmatic fallacy,Skeptic's Dictionary
- Pragmatic Fallacy, TheAlmightyGuru