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A Freeper's Introduction to Rhetoric (Part 7, False Cause and Begging the Question)
Introduction to Logic | Irving M. Copi & Carl Cohen

Posted on 12/30/2003 11:34:11 AM PST by general_re

False Cause

It is obvious that any reasoning that relies on treating as the cause of some thing or event what is not really its cause must be seriously mistaken. But often we are tempted to suppose, or led to suppose, that we understand some specific cause-and-effect relation when in fact we do not. The nature of the connection between cause and effect, and how we determine whether such a connection is present or absent, are central problems of inductive logic and scientific method. These problems are discussed in detail in Part Four of this book. Presuming the reality of a causal connection that does not really exist is, in any event, a common mistake; in Latin the mistake is called the fallacy of non causa pro causa; we call it simply the fallacy of false cause.

It sometimes happens that we presume that one event is caused by another because it follows that other closely in time. We know, of course, that mere temporal succession does not establish a causal connection, but it is easy to be fooled. If an aggressive move in foreign policy is followed by a distantly related international event for which we had been aiming, some may mistakenly conclude that the aggressive policy was the cause of that event. In primitive science such mistakes were common; we now reject as absurd the claim that beating drums is the cause of the sun's reappearance after an eclipse, despite the undeniable evidence that every time drums have been beaten during an eclipse the sun subsequently did reappear.

Mistakes in reasoning of this kind remain widespread: Unusual weather conditions are blamed on some unrelated celestial phenomenon that happened to precede them; an infection really caused by a virus is thought to be caused by a chill wind or wet feet, and so on. This variety of false cause is called the fallacy of post hoc ergo propter hoc ("after the thing, therefore because of the thing"); an example of it appeared in a recent letter to The New York Times, in which the correspondent wrote:

The death penalty in the United States has given us the highest crime rate and greatest number of prisoners per 100,000 population in the industrialized world.

Post hoc ergo propter hoc is an easy fallacy to detect when it is blatant, but even the best of scientists and statesmen are on occasion misled.

Begging the Question: Petitio Principii

To beg the question is to assume the truth of what one seeks to prove, in the effort to prove it. That would seem to be a silly mistake, evident to all — but how silly or obvious the mistake is depends largely on the way in which the premisses of the argument are formulated. Their wording often obscures the fact that buried within one of the premisses assumed lies the conclusion itself. This fallacy is illustrated by the following argument, reported long ago by the logician Richard Whately: "To allow every man unbounded freedom of speech must always be, on the whole, advantageous to the state; for it is highly conducive to the interests of the community that each individual should enjoy a liberty, perfectly unlimited, of expressing his sentiments."

Sometimes we fall into this mistake when, in the effort to establish our conclusion, we cast about in search of premisses that will do the trick. Of course the conclusion itself, disguised in other language, certainly will do the trick! Most fallacies, we noted earlier, can be viewed in some light as fallacies of relevance — but the petitio principii cannot. The premisses of the argument, in this case, are not irrelevant; they certainly do prove the conclusion — but they do so trivially. A petitio principii is always technically valid — but always worthless, as well.

This is another of those mistakes that often go unrecognized by those who commit them. The presumption buried in the premisses may be obscured by confusing or unrecognized synonyms, or by a chain of intervening argument. Every petitio is a circular argument, but the circle that has been constructed may — if it is large or fuzzy — go quite undetected.

Powerful minds sometimes are snared by this fallacy, as is illustrated by a highly controversial issue in the history of philosophy. Logicians have long sought to establish the reliability of inductive procedures by establishing the truth of what is called the "principle of induction." This is the principle that the laws of nature will operate tomorrow as they operate today, that in basic ways nature is essentially uniform, and that therefore we may rely on past experience to guide our conduct in the future. "That the future will be essentially like the past" is the claim at issue, but this claim, never doubted in ordinary life, turns out to be very difficult to prove. Some thinkers have claimed that they could prove it by showing that, when we have in the past relied on the inductive principle, we have always found that this method has helped us to achieve our objectives. They ask, "Why conclude that the future will be like the past?" and answer, "Because it always has been like the past."

But as David Hume pointed out, this common argument is a petitio, it begs the question. For the point at issue is whether nature will continue to behave regularly; that it has done so in the past cannot serve as proof that it will do so in the future — unless one assumes the very principle that is here in question: that the future will be like the past. And so Hume, granting that in the past the future has been like the past, asked the telling question with which philosophers still tussle: How can we know that future futures will be like past futures? They may be so, of course, but we may not assume that they will be for the sake of proving that they will.


TOPICS: Education; Miscellaneous; Reference; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: argument; crevolist; fallacies; fallacy; logic; reason; rhetoric
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Previous installments:

Part 1 - Introduction and the Argument From Ignorance
Part 2 - the Appeal to Inappropriate Authority
Part 3 - the Argument Ad Hominem
Part 4 - the Appeal to Force and the Appeal to Emotion
Part 5 - the Irrelevant Conclusion
Part 6 - Fallacies of Presumption and the Complex Question

1 posted on 12/30/2003 11:34:11 AM PST by general_re
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To: longshadow; PatrickHenry; Woahhs; P.O.E.; No More Gore Anymore; jigsaw; Snake65; RobFromGa; ...
Part 7.

Apologies for the delays, lack of interaction, et cetera. Part 8 will, tomorrow, close the discussion of fallacies of presumption with the fallacies of Accident and Converse Accident. Part 9 will then begin the discussion of the fallacies of ambiguity.

2 posted on 12/30/2003 11:36:21 AM PST by general_re ("Frantic orthodoxy is never rooted in faith, but in doubt." - Reinhold Niebuhr)
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To: *crevo_list; VadeRetro; jennyp; Junior; longshadow; RadioAstronomer; Physicist; LogicWings; ...
PING. [This ping list is for the evolution side of evolution threads, and sometimes for other science topics. FReepmail me to be added or dropped.]
3 posted on 12/30/2003 12:37:25 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Hic amor, haec patria est.)
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To: general_re
Thank you for posting these.
4 posted on 12/30/2003 12:43:59 PM PST by Entropy Squared
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To: PatrickHenry
Thanks for the ping!
5 posted on 12/30/2003 12:50:19 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: general_re
To beg the question is to assume the truth of what one seeks to prove, in the effort to prove it.
1. Everything has a cause.
2. Therefore the universe has a cause.
3. Therefore God.
My apologies to Aquinas for the gross over-simplification of his second proof. For more detailed information:
Thomas Aquinas: Reasons in Proof of the Existence of God.
6 posted on 12/30/2003 1:30:55 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Hic amor, haec patria est.)
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To: Entropy Squared
My pleasure.
7 posted on 12/30/2003 2:34:19 PM PST by general_re ("Frantic orthodoxy is never rooted in faith, but in doubt." - Reinhold Niebuhr)
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To: PatrickHenry
More or less. Essentially, the name of the game in much of Aquinas's "proofs" is to define God as existing, via the circular route of defining God as being equivalent to some thing already known to exist, or to some thing that is thought must inevitably exist. The fact that such a definition becomes a one-off when done in such a manner only serves to obscure the fact that one is simply defining God as existing - like all petitio arguments, it is, at its core, a tautology. Ignoring the other holes in the First Cause argument - and there are several - one can readily illustrate the absurdity by preserving the logic, such as it is, but changing the particulars:

P1: God is an apple tree in my back yard.
P2: The apple tree in my back yard exists.
C1: Therefore, God exists.

And so forth. Tomorrow, the fallacy of accident will be the topic - the First Cause argument also serves as a reasonable illustration of that fallacy as well.

8 posted on 12/30/2003 3:08:29 PM PST by general_re ("Frantic orthodoxy is never rooted in faith, but in doubt." - Reinhold Niebuhr)
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To: general_re
when do we get the "no True Scotsman"?
9 posted on 12/30/2003 4:23:06 PM PST by longshadow
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To: general_re
Also called "Assuming the Consequent."
10 posted on 12/30/2003 5:20:30 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: general_re
Agreed. Mostly taugologies. His third proof is a bit different -- I consider it argumentum ex anno (pardon the vulgarity). Greatly simplified: there could never have been nothing, because if that were so, then there would still be nothing, because only nothing comes from nothing. So something was always existing, therefore God.

Everything makes sense to me until the conclusion, which simply doesn't follow. It's just as reasonable (more, really, considering Occham's razor) to conclude that there was always a universe. (I ain't gonna get into stuff popping out of nowhere, because QM gives me indigestion.)

11 posted on 12/30/2003 6:23:56 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Hic amor, haec patria est.)
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To: general_re
Ping for later. Off topic: I never really understood "begging the question," seems like people use it to mean that "your response makes me think of this question, which I will pretend that you are just begging me to ask."

But end-of-year tax planning still calls. All I have left to do is configure one laptop and try to negotiate a settlement on my Yellow Pages ad bill. Verizon put a photo of someone other than me in the ad and I've refused to pay for it, and we've been going round and round for a few years, actually. If I get it resolved tomorrow, that's a nice reduction in my overhead (looking on the bright side).

Re: laptop. Half of me wants a cute little Vaio type with Centrino processor (lighter, cooler) weighing in total less than 5 pounds that I can easily shlep to court to type out orders and calculate things using spreadsheets and so forth, and use for research in the law library, and so forth, which is eminently tax deductible. And half of me wants an all-the-bells-and-whistles 17 inch Toshiba satellite type with P4 technology and hyperthreading and Harmon Kardon speakers that I can use to play DVDs in bed or on the treadmill, which is NOT tax deductible, unless its primary use is for the office and making money, which is why I don't want or need two.

Decisions, decisions.
12 posted on 12/30/2003 6:55:53 PM PST by CobaltBlue
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To: CobaltBlue
Go light, is my advice - your back and shoulders will thank you later ;)

I don't know how the Yellow Pages people work, but way back when, when I was working in a print shop, the way it usually worked was if you signed off on an incorrect proof, you were pretty much SOL. Typos, wrong graphics, wrong colors, whatever - we made a good effort to catch as much as we could, and usually we caught just about everything, but ultimately, it was the customer's responsibility to do the final proofreading. I assume that you either didn't get a proof copy, or what was printed differed from the proof, since presumably you would have noticed a trivial error like someone else's face on your ad. In which case, I don't see what the phone book people could possibly argue about - they fouled up, and it should be up to them to fix it. Tell 'em you'll take free ad space as compensation, if you want - they might go for that rather than a straight refund, particularly if it was a big ad, and consequently, a big refund...

13 posted on 12/30/2003 7:23:58 PM PST by general_re ("Frantic orthodoxy is never rooted in faith, but in doubt." - Reinhold Niebuhr)
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To: general_re
The salesman for the Yellow Pages never sent me the final copy to sign off on, so they can't pin that on me.

It's a very bad violation of legal ethics to use an actor in a lawyer's ad without clearly indicating that it's an actor, so as soon as I saw the damn thing I went through the roof due to fear of tangling with the Legal Ethics section of the Bar Association, and have had a clear paper trail to that effect.

Funny thing is that my own photo, although older and less attractive than the model, has done better for me. I don't think people are looking for lawyers based on looks.

I used to work with a male lawyer who said that every grey hair on his head was worth money.
14 posted on 12/30/2003 7:33:11 PM PST by CobaltBlue
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To: CobaltBlue
Funny thing is that my own photo, although older and less attractive than the model, has done better for me. I don't think people are looking for lawyers based on looks.

Hey, show me your picture! And how are you on business law, insurance bankrupcy defaults, and 3rd party contingent liability? Oh, did I tell you I need lawyer? Something about hot coffee spilt in a lap when someone fell asleep driving to work ...

15 posted on 12/30/2003 7:45:23 PM PST by balrog666 (Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe.)
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To: balrog666
I hope you don't need a lawyer, but if you do, I am only licensed to practice in VA, I could maybe help you find one through networking.

16 posted on 12/30/2003 7:55:23 PM PST by CobaltBlue
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To: PatrickHenry
The Fallacy of the Ultimate Turtle?
17 posted on 12/30/2003 8:55:49 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Yes. Earth sitting atop a long, almost infinite stack of green turtles, and finally -- way, waaaaaaay down -- you get to one that's electric blue, much bigger then the rest, that's where the stack suddenly stops.

Or ... maybe that's the First Cause argument.

18 posted on 12/31/2003 3:27:06 AM PST by PatrickHenry (Hic amor, haec patria est.)
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To: longshadow
Everyone's so impatient for their favorites, but I actually think that one's not in here....
19 posted on 12/31/2003 6:02:37 AM PST by general_re ("Frantic orthodoxy is never rooted in faith, but in doubt." - Reinhold Niebuhr)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Also called "Assuming the Consequent."

IIRC, "consequent" describes and is applicable only to conditional premises. There is the fallacy of affirming the consequent, which isn't on the list for discussion, as it's a formal error, rather than an informal one - that fallacy arises when you use the truth of the consequent to infer the truth of the antecedent in a conditional premise, e.g.:

P1: If Doctor Stochastic discovered the theory of relativity, then he is a smart man.
P2: Doctor Stochastic is a smart man.
C1: Therefore, Doctor Stochastic discovered the theory of relativity.

Or more generally:

If p, then q.
q.
Therefore, p.

20 posted on 12/31/2003 6:20:24 AM PST by general_re ("Frantic orthodoxy is never rooted in faith, but in doubt." - Reinhold Niebuhr)
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