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Notes on Logic:

Informal, Deductive, and Inductive

Posts tagged with "fallacy"

A Statistical Fallacy Using an Unselected Sample for an Average Result (Revised)

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Normally, statisticians seek large enough samples properly selected so that data are representative of the particular group under investigation. When samples are "unselected," biases can be introduced in several ways--especially when the sample size is too small and the data presented are unrepresentative.

Consider the following argument purporting to indicate common factors of all persons suffering from back pain:

A combined medical group from New York University and Columbia University conducted a study covering 5000 consecutive patients with back pain. Because the study included every back-pain patient seen at the two universities until the total of 5000 was reached, it represented an unselected sample. Its results apply to everyone with back pain, rather than to a special segment of back-pain patients.


(Benno Isaacs and Jay Kobler, The Nickolaus Technique (New York: Viking, 1978), 36.)

The results cited were in 80% of the cases the back pain was due to muscular insufficiency or poor flexibility.

Is an inference from a class composed of a given sequence of 5000 patients seen at two university hospitals in New York over a specified time-interval in the 1970's applicable everywhere at any time to each and every person who experiences back pain? Of course not.

A few of the implicit biases can be highlighted by raising the following questions:
(1) Are men or women more likely to seek help for back pain?
(2) Are persons with health insurance more likely to seek help for back pain?
(3) Is age, religion, race, culture, language, and so forth a significant factor for a person to seek actively university hospital treatment in New York?
(4) Does a hospital's reputation affect the composition of patient admission?
(5) Are persons in New York in the 1970's during the specified interval seeking help for back pain at New York University and Columbia University representative of everyone?
(6) Are persons with some kinds of back pain more likely seek help than others with different kind of back pain?
(7) Are persons in a large city more likely to seek help than person living in the country or small cities?
(8) Are college students more likely to seek help at a university hospital and are these individuals representative of the general population of the world?
(9) Do the university hospitals in question have a reputation for treating specific kinds of back pain?
(10) Was facility of transportation at the time of the study in New York city representative of facility of transportation for any place in the world?

The fallacy committed here is termed the hasty generalization. This fallacy occurs when one argues from the evidence of certain carelessly selected cases and to a generalized conclusion based solely on that evidence. For example, simply because some sand dunes are on a beach are mostly yellow in color, it does not necessarily follow all sand dunes on every beach are mostly yellow in color.

Likewise, simply because most of the 5000 persons with back pain admitted to New York University and Columbia University Medical Centers had muscular insufficiency and inadequate flexibility, this does not imply that anyone, everywhere, at any time, with back pain has muscular insufficiency and inadequate flexibility.

Note that the conclusion of the argument presented by the authors cited above may well be true. The fact that the argument is fallacious means that the conclusion does not follow logically from the evidence presented.

<i>Tu Quoque</i> as <i>ad Hominem</i>

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The central purpose of "Notes on Logic" is to provide examples and brief analyses of logical argumentation. These analyses often call into question the exact nature of a fallacy. What is the difference between an argument and a persuasive appeal? Are persuasive appeals only fallacies when they adduce logical arguments?

I'm assuming that a fallacy can occur only in the context of an argument--not the kind of arguments involving emotional disagreements, but the kind of argument where a conclusion is claimed to logically follow from reasons or evidence presented.

Let's take a look at two passages from Time magazine's "Letters to the Editor" illustrating the tu quoque. In both examples, the issues in the original argument are dropped, and the character of the author of the argument is addressed, instead. Since the contextual evidence indicates the two replies are intended to oppose the original arguments, the tu quoque's cited here may be considered fallacious appeals.

Even though the tu quoque is an informal fallacy (a fallacy variant of ad hominem), its structure is most often like this, as described in Wikipedia:

A makes criticism P.
A is also guilty of P.
Therefore, P is dismissed.


When presented in this manner, the argument structure reveals the irrelevancy clearly. Another variant of the tu quoque is discussed by Julian Baggini, the editor of The Philosophers' Magazine, in "Bad Moves: Tu quoque."

The first passage is on the subject of horsemeat as a part of the diet of many countries.

Would You Dine Equine?
[Joel Stein] said that in the U.S. we oppose eating horsemeat because we think "like a 14-year-old girl." He sounds like an 8-year-old boy who pulls the wings off flies for fun. Perhaps Stein should also order some cat, dog and hamster meat.
Karla LaFitte
Spring, Texas


(Karla LaFitte, "Would You Dine Equine?" in "Letters," Time, 169 No. 10 (5 March 2007), 15.)

Notice how not only is there a tu quoque present, but also there is a parting hint of the slippery slope fallacy.

The second passage is related to a news story about NASA astronaut Lisa Marie Nowak:

A Woman Scorned
Jeffrey Kluger stated that "In the tut-tut world of exposé journalism, astronauts—particularly women—misbehave at their peril." I'm not sure exactly how women these days are "misbehaving," but I am sure that there are countless successful, powerful women who would be incensed by your characterization. Just take a look at the way our male politicians are acting and tell me that they are not the ones misbehaving at their peril.
Katie McGuire
Danville, Calif


(Katie McGuire, "A Woman Scorned" in "Letters," Time, 169 No. 10 (5 March 2007), 15.)

Again, this passage fits closely the formal structure described above for the tu quoque fallacy. Also, there's a suggestion of another compounding fallacy. The snob appeal of an ad populum purportedly adds support to Katie McGuire's conclusion by pointing out that "countless successful, powerful women who would be incensed by [the] characterization."

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