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Terms of Illogic

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June 22, 2004, 23:48
wordcrafter
Terms of Illogic
A few months ago we did a theme on Terms of Logic. As a natural counterpart, let's look at terms of illogic.

amphibology; amphiboly – an ambiguity which results from ambiguous grammar

An amphibology is often so obvious that it humorous rather than misleading. "One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got into my pajamas I'll never know." – Groucho Marx, in the movie Animal Crackers)

But the ambiguity can mislead the hearer to an illogical conclusion. When King Croesus consulted the Oracle at Delphi about his military plans, the response was, "If Croesus crosses the Halys, a great power will be destroyed." Croesus took this as predicting victory for him. In the fact, when he crossed the River Halys into Persia, a great army was indeed destroyed; but unhappily for him, the army annihilated was his own.

The oracle gave us our bonus word:
delphic
– obscurely prophetic; also, ambiguous; mysterious
June 23, 2004, 06:24
Robert Arvanitis
Thanks, wordcrafter, for triggering an old memory. Two words came to mind when I saw amphiboly. ("Amphi" related to "ambi" or two, and "boly," or thrown.)

The first is "zeugma" meaning yoked together -- use of a word to govern two or more words though appropriate to only one; "`Mr. Pickwick took his hat and his leave.'

The second is "syllepsis" --use of a word to govern two or more words though agreeing in number or case etc. with only one.
(both www.cogsci.princeton.edu/cgi-bin/webwn)
It seems the first is more a logic error, while the second relates to grammatical ambiguity.

I enjoy "nice" distinctions -- chaconne vs. passagaglia, hurling vs. shinty, even the original vs. current meanings of "nice."


RJA
June 23, 2004, 21:23
wordcrafter
A post on our board has asked, "Is amphibology [yesterday's word] usually an ambiguous statement because of grammar...or could it just be an ambigous statement?"

Technically, amphibology is an abiguity of grammar. In contrast,

equivocation – the type of ambiguity which occurs when a single word or phrase is ambiguous; this this ambiguity is not grammatical but lexical. [Obviously, 'equivocation' has other and more familiar meanings.]

Equivocation, like amphibology, can often be humorous, as in the Who's on First comedy routine (text or hilarious audio), and it is often the basis of humorous headlines. Among the bloopers in Headlines That You Just Have to Hang On To, by Bob Levy of the Washington Post, you'll find such examples asBut equivocation, like amphibology, can also mislead the hearer. The equivocation lies between two meanings of "human": 1. a person as a whole ("human being"), which has a right not to be killed, and 2. a part of a person ("the human hand"), which though undeniably human has no such right. Alvaré is confuting the two senses. Her fallacy would be would be obvious if the passage read, "Humanity has a right not to be killed, and the humanity of the human hand is undeniable." Of course, Alvaré makes perfect sense if you assume that a fetus is a human being, but that would almost be assuming the desired conclusion.

[I thank The Fallacy Files for much of the matter in the last two days, and expect to use it further this week.]

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June 24, 2004, 22:50
wordcrafter
argument ad hominem – countering an opponent's argument by attacking the opponent, rather than the argument he makes.
[In effect, an attempt to change the subject from the matter at hand, and focus instead on the opponent personally. This is a failure of logic, in that the validity of an argument does not depend on the person making it.]

An ad hominem argument may be either 'abusive' or 'circumstantial':Apparently John Locke coined the term 'ad hominem' (An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 1690), and Schopenhauer was the first to distinguish the abusive fallacy from other forms (The Art of Controversy).

Some dictionaries have definitions which I suggest are incorrect:

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June 25, 2004, 19:51
wordcrafter
tu quoque [Latin for "you too," or more loosely, "So's your old man."] – a retort charging an adversary with being or doing what he criticizes in others
. . .In ad hominem argument the accused hurls a charge against his accuser. Tu quoque is a type of ad hominem, in which he hurls back the very charge of which he stands accused. Logically, this is irrelevant to whether the accused is himself guilty. But tu quoque can be very effective, by putting the accuser on the defensive. The following is from a 1997 CNN interview with Osama Bin Laden, about 40% of the way down in the full interview. Nowhere in Bin Ladin's long answer (here given in full) does he ever addresses the question posed ("Do you sponsor terrorism?"); he simply makes that very same accusation against the US.

REPORTER: Now, the United States government says that you are still funding military training camps here in Afganistan for militant, Islamic fighters and that you are a sponsor of international terrorism; but others describe you as the new hero of the Arab-Islamic world. Are these accusations true? How do you describe yourself?

BIN LADIN: After the collapse of the Soviet Union in which the U.S. has no mentionable role, but rather the credit goes to God, Praise and Glory be to Him, and the Mujahidin in Afghanistan, this collapse made the US more haughty and arrogant and it has started to look at itself as a Master of this world and established what it calls the new world order. It wanted to delude people that it can do whatever it wants, but it can't do this. It leveled against me and others as many accusations as it desired and wished. It is these (accusations) that you mentioned. The US today as a result of the arrogant atmosphere has set a double standard, calling whoever goes against its injustice a terrorist. It wants to occupy our countries, steal our resources, impose on us agents to rule us based not on what God has revealed and wants us to agree on all these. If we refuse to do so, it will say you are terrorists. With a simple look at the US behaviors, we find that it judges the behavior of the poor Palestinian children whose country was occupied: if they throw stones against the Israeli occupation, it says they are terrorists whereas when the Israeli pilots bombed the United Nations building in Qana, Lebanon while was full of children and women, the US stopped any plan to condemn Israel. At the time that they condemn any Muslim who calls for his right, they receive the highest top official of the Irish Republican Army (Gerry Adams) at the White House as a political leader, while woe, all woe is the Muslims if they cry out for their rights. Wherever we look, we find the US as the leader of terrorism and crime in the world. The US does not consider it a terrorist act to throw atomic bombs at nations thousands of miles away, when it would not be possible for those bombs to hit military troops only. These bombs were rather thrown at entire nations, including women, children and elderly people and up to this day the traces of those bombs remain in Japan. The US does not consider it terrorism when hundreds of thousands of our sons and brothers in Iraq died for lack of food or medicine. So, there is no base for what the US says and this saying does not affect us, because we, by the grace of God, are dependent on Him, Praise and Glory be to Him, getting help from Him against the US. As for the last part of your question, we are fulfilling a duty which God, Praise and Glory be to Him, decreed for us. We look upon those heroes, those men who undertook to kill the American occupiers in Riyadh and Khobar (Dhahran). We describe those as heroes and describe them as men. They have pulled down the disgrace and submissiveness off the forehead of their nation. We ask Allah, Praise and Glory be to Him, to accept them as martyrs.

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June 27, 2004, 09:20
wordcrafter
ipse dixit [typical use] – an unsupported dogmatic assertion
ipse dixit [broader usage] – argument from supposedly conclusive authority, rather than from reasoned evidence.
Also called appeal to authority or argumentum ad verecundiam.. May be used to prove [As in the old medieval view "Aristotle says" was conclusive proof] or to refute ["Eugenics? The Nazis were the first to practice eugenics."].

The broader concept is familiar to anyone who has heard a teenager say, "Janet's parents let her go to R-rated movies. Tim's parents let him go to R-rated movies; even Margaret is allowed to go to R-rated movies, and you know how strict her parents are! Why can't I go?" (Henriette A. Klauser, Writing on Both Sides of the Brain)

For the more typical usage, here are a recent example and an older one.
June 28, 2004, 07:45
wordcrafter
post hoc – the logical fallacy of concluding that if one thing happens after another, the first must is the cause of the second.
[Short for Latin post hoc, ergo propter hoc "After this, therefore because of this." The term is also used where one draws such a conclusion when two events coincide]

If A and B occur together, A might cause B. But perhaps B causes A; or they have a separate common cause; or they coincide by mere coincidence.

It is easy to find comic examples ("Wind is caused by the trees waving violently, stirring up the air"), but let's start with a serious one.
June 29, 2004, 08:33
wordcrafter
false dilemma – two alternatives set up as if they were the only options, when there are in fact middle-ground or other options. [also known as bifurcation, black-and-white fallacy, either/or fallacy] Pithy sloganeering often uses the false dilemma (e.g., "America: Love it or leave it"), ignoring possible middle grounds.

It's useful to contrast contrary with contradictory. If I say, "It's hot today," you contradict me if you simply deny, and say, "It's not hot" (one or the other of us is right). But to assert the contrary is to take the opposite position, "It's cold" (we each may be wrong). The "love it or leave it" slogan treats two contrary alternatives as if they were contradictory, with no other choice.Wordcrafter notes:
- I'm not suggesting that "false dilemmas" come only or principally from only one side of the political aisle.
- Here is the full context of Bush's remark, beyond what Mulkey quotes: "Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make. Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists. From this day forward, any nation that continues to harbor or support terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a hostile regime."

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June 30, 2004, 07:50
wordcrafter
Peressutti uses "beg the question" to mean "raises or leads inevitably to the question". That's the common usage but not the original meaning, and the authorities disagree over whether that newer usage is proper. The original meaning referred to a certain logical fallacy.

begging the question – argument by taking for granted, and uses as a premise, the very conclusion to be proved. [The Latin phrase is petitio principii, which I understand to mean 'pleading for the principle'. Can Latin scholars confirm or correct?] One web-author gives this example:One can see how the phrases 'begging the question ' might be understood in the newer way. But why would the word 'begging' be used for this sort of logical fallacy? What do our readers think?
June 30, 2004, 08:28
arnie
Michael Quinion's World Wide Words site has another of his excellent articles on this subject.


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