Title: The Criterion of Relevance
1The Criterion of Relevance
- There are three criteria of a sound argument
- 1. the premises must be acceptable
- 2. the premises must be relevant
- 3. the premises must be adequate
2The Criterion of Relevance
- Compare
- You should vote for Johnson because she is honest
and is well informed about the issues. - You should vote for Johnson because her mother
used to be my kindergarten teacher. - You should vote for Johnson because she is the
only female candidate.
3The Criterion of Relevance
- So we can say that a premise is relevant if
- a. it is more likely that the conclusion would be
true if we accepted it - b. helps make it reasonable to accept the
conclusion. - Otherwise, it is a non sequitur.
4The Criterion of Relevance
- Example
- I am opposed to the proposed anti-smoking by-law
and will vote against it at the Council meeting.
Such a by-law is inappropriate in a city in which
the Imperial Tobacco Company is one of the
largest employers.
5Some Particular Fallacies
- 1. Appeal to Pity (ad misericordium)
- 2. Appeal to Force (ad baculum)
- 3. Appeal to Popularity (ad populum)
- 4. Appeal to Authority (ad verecundium)
- 5. Ad Hominem
- i. Tu Quoque
- 6. Straw Man
6Appeal to Pity (ad misericordium)
- P1 A argues for p
- P2 A deserves pity
- C Therefore, p is true
7Appeal to Pity (ad misericordium)
- Example
- Student "I didn't deserve a C on this paper! I
am trying to get into law school and I need an A-
average and if I dont get into law school I am
going to be very depressed."
8Appeal to Pity (ad misericordium)
- Example
- The judge was very unfair. He shouldnt have
found Evelyn guilty. She is a single parent with
three small children and an ex-husband who
refuses to make his support payments, and Im
sure she would not have started shoplifting if
she werent really hard pressed for money.
9Appeal to Force (ad baculum)
- P1 A says that you should accept p, or else x
will happen - P2 x is threatening or bad
- C Therefore p is true
10Appeal to Force (ad baculum)
- Example
- Employer "Sure, you can unionize the shop, but I
won't be responsible if you are permanently
unemployed afterwards."
11Appeal to Force (ad baculum)
- Example
- Listen, Im telling you that my son did not cheat
on his exam if you dont agree, well step
outside and settle this matter man to man.
12Appeal to Popularity (ad populum)
- Many people believe p
- Therefore p is true
- Nobody believes p
- Therefore p is false
13Appeal to Popularity (ad populum)
- Example
- Marijuana can't be all that bad for you.
According to a recent poll 70 of university
students smoke it.
14Appeal to Popularity (ad populum)
- Example
- Phrenology is unscientific nonsense. Nobody
believes it any longer.
15Appeal to Authority (ad verecundium)
- A says p
- A is not an authority/expert on p
- Therefore p is true
16Appeal to Authority (ad verecundium)
- Example
- Mats Sundin, forward of the Vancouver Canucks,
says that the Ford Explorer is the safest car on
the market. Therefore it is the safest car!
17Appeal to Authority (ad verecundium)
- Example
- Albert Einstein, even after all his research into
the nature of the universe, still believed in
God. He once wrote, I do not believe the
universe was the result of blind chance. If
belief in God made sense to Einstein, then it
makes sense to me.
18Appeal to Authority (ad verecundium)
- However
- Sometimes we can appeal to authorities, when
- a. we lack the ability to attain information
ourselves, and - b. the authority appealed to is authoritative
19(Attacking the Person) Ad Hominem
- A says or believes p
- A is insert insults here
- Therefore p is false
20(Attacking the Person) Ad Hominem
- Three forms
- Abusive a direct personal attack
- E.g.
- "Jones argues for vegetarianism. He says it is
wrong to kill animals unless you really need to
for food, and that, as a matter of fact, nearly
everyone can get enough food without eating meat.
But Jones is just a nerdy intellectual. So we
can safely conclude that vegetarianism is
nonsense."
21(Attacking the Person) Ad Hominem
- 2. Circumstantial not necessarily abusive, but
draws attention to the circumstantial situation
of the person who is putting forward the claim - E.g.,
- The Ontario Medical Association claims that the
governments ban on extra-billing will produce a
second-class system of medical care. It is
difficult to accept their claim, however, since
it is so obviously self-serving. Let us not
forget that the OMA is essentially nothing more
than a trade union and that it is trying to
negotiate a contract that gets the best deal for
its members.
22(Attacking the Person) Ad Hominem
- Of course, sometimes it is important (e.g., in
the legal system) to determine whether someone is
trustworthy (can they be a reliable witness or
expert) or to determine what someone's personal
qualities are (for the role of babysitter, e.g.)
23(Attacking the Person) Ad Hominem
- 3. Tu quoque (you too)
- A argues that those who endorse p are wrong
- B replies that A is one of those people
- Therefore p is true
24Tu Quoque
- E.g.
- "During the 1980's many American journalists
passed harsh judgments on South African
apartheid. They wrote that it was unjust, cruel
and immoral. But given the disgraceful history
of race relations in America, these American
journalists were in no position to pass judgment
on South Africa. So their judgments were without
value."
25Tu Quoque
- E.g.
- Wilma You cheated on your income tax. Dont you
realize thats wrong? - Walter Hey, wait a minute. You cheated on you
income tax last year. Or have you forgotten
about that?
26Straw Man
- Theory X is a weaker version of theory Y
- A refutes theory X
- Therefore theory Y is refuted
27Straw Man
- E.g.
- "Susan advocates the legalization of cocaine.
But I cannot agree with any position based on the
assumption that cocaine is good for you and that
a society of drug addicts can flourish. So I
disagree with Susan"
28Straw Man
- E.g.
- Those who want the death penalty restored have
not really thought their position through. They
hold that every murderer would have been deterred
from committing murder had the death penalty been
in force, and this is absurd. Otherwise,
countries with the death penalty would have no
murders which is obviously false.
29Self-Test No. 13