Is “I cannot imagine a mechanism for X to happen, so X can never happen” a named logical fallacy?











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I have encountered this reasoning quite frequently:



Somebody posits the hypothesis that an event X can happpen. A recent example I encountered was "vinegar and salt in the boiling water make eggs easier to peel afterwards", but I have seen many more. Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen. In that example, the reply could be "salt and vinegar cannot cross the shell, so they will not make the egg easier to peel".



I have seen two ways in which this argument can be false. First, the replying person might just have wrong knowledge (maybe vinegar or salt can pass the shell?) - but I don't think this is a problem of the reasoning process, it is just correct reasoning based on a false assumption. What I find more interesting is that frequently, there can be other mechanisms for X to happen - maybe vinegar doesn't have to pass the shell to make the egg peelable? - but the person making the argument overlooks that possibility and goes from "the mechanism for X that I have in mind doesn't work" to the conclusion "X is completely impossible".



Another example would be people who insist that placebo does not help against pain, because per definition, it contains no chemically active substance that acts on pain receptors.



Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process, not a general reason why arguing against vinegar in egg water would be a wrong position to take. (In fact, I don't even know if vinegar in egg water has any effect).










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  • 3




    I don't think this is always a fallacy. Sure, the "I can't imagine it happening, therefore it can't happen" variant is, but if the person is a subject matter expert (on... vinegar and salt and eggshells, I guess, haha) who actually knows all of the mechanisms through which something could happen, it seems different. That's perhaps less applicable in biology than something more fixed, though.
    – Nic Hartley
    Dec 11 at 20:10






  • 2




    The title and body seem to ask two different questions: the title asks about not being able to imagine any mechanism, while the body is about imagining a single mechanism and then disproving that. Which is it?
    – Todd Sewell
    Dec 11 at 20:19








  • 3




    This is a variation on "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence", but I agree with @NicHartley, in proper context it is not a fallacy at all: "In some circumstances it can be safely assumed that if a certain event had occurred, evidence of it could be discovered by qualified investigators. In such circumstances it is perfectly reasonable to take the absence of proof of its occurrence as positive proof of its non-occurrence." (Copi, Introduction to Logic) Replace "evidence" with "mechanism".
    – Conifold
    Dec 11 at 23:15








  • 2




    @Conifold you are making an interesting point. Your citation is subtly different, I think, because it introduces the matter of evidence of X occuring. My question assumed that the person making the argument does not know if there is evidence of X or not, and just claims that it cannot happen anyway, so is not interested in seeking such evidence. In reality, I have seen cases where evidence for X having happened was presented to the person making the claim, and that person denied that the evidence can be true, based on their reasoning of "it should never happen". So the claimer cannot...
    – rumtscho
    Dec 12 at 10:39






  • 2




    ... be said to be reasoning on the lines of "if it were possible, it would have been observed by now" in these cases - since their reasoning is used to deny the truth of the observation having happened.
    – rumtscho
    Dec 12 at 10:40















up vote
28
down vote

favorite
1












I have encountered this reasoning quite frequently:



Somebody posits the hypothesis that an event X can happpen. A recent example I encountered was "vinegar and salt in the boiling water make eggs easier to peel afterwards", but I have seen many more. Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen. In that example, the reply could be "salt and vinegar cannot cross the shell, so they will not make the egg easier to peel".



I have seen two ways in which this argument can be false. First, the replying person might just have wrong knowledge (maybe vinegar or salt can pass the shell?) - but I don't think this is a problem of the reasoning process, it is just correct reasoning based on a false assumption. What I find more interesting is that frequently, there can be other mechanisms for X to happen - maybe vinegar doesn't have to pass the shell to make the egg peelable? - but the person making the argument overlooks that possibility and goes from "the mechanism for X that I have in mind doesn't work" to the conclusion "X is completely impossible".



Another example would be people who insist that placebo does not help against pain, because per definition, it contains no chemically active substance that acts on pain receptors.



Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process, not a general reason why arguing against vinegar in egg water would be a wrong position to take. (In fact, I don't even know if vinegar in egg water has any effect).










share|improve this question


















  • 3




    I don't think this is always a fallacy. Sure, the "I can't imagine it happening, therefore it can't happen" variant is, but if the person is a subject matter expert (on... vinegar and salt and eggshells, I guess, haha) who actually knows all of the mechanisms through which something could happen, it seems different. That's perhaps less applicable in biology than something more fixed, though.
    – Nic Hartley
    Dec 11 at 20:10






  • 2




    The title and body seem to ask two different questions: the title asks about not being able to imagine any mechanism, while the body is about imagining a single mechanism and then disproving that. Which is it?
    – Todd Sewell
    Dec 11 at 20:19








  • 3




    This is a variation on "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence", but I agree with @NicHartley, in proper context it is not a fallacy at all: "In some circumstances it can be safely assumed that if a certain event had occurred, evidence of it could be discovered by qualified investigators. In such circumstances it is perfectly reasonable to take the absence of proof of its occurrence as positive proof of its non-occurrence." (Copi, Introduction to Logic) Replace "evidence" with "mechanism".
    – Conifold
    Dec 11 at 23:15








  • 2




    @Conifold you are making an interesting point. Your citation is subtly different, I think, because it introduces the matter of evidence of X occuring. My question assumed that the person making the argument does not know if there is evidence of X or not, and just claims that it cannot happen anyway, so is not interested in seeking such evidence. In reality, I have seen cases where evidence for X having happened was presented to the person making the claim, and that person denied that the evidence can be true, based on their reasoning of "it should never happen". So the claimer cannot...
    – rumtscho
    Dec 12 at 10:39






  • 2




    ... be said to be reasoning on the lines of "if it were possible, it would have been observed by now" in these cases - since their reasoning is used to deny the truth of the observation having happened.
    – rumtscho
    Dec 12 at 10:40













up vote
28
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
28
down vote

favorite
1






1





I have encountered this reasoning quite frequently:



Somebody posits the hypothesis that an event X can happpen. A recent example I encountered was "vinegar and salt in the boiling water make eggs easier to peel afterwards", but I have seen many more. Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen. In that example, the reply could be "salt and vinegar cannot cross the shell, so they will not make the egg easier to peel".



I have seen two ways in which this argument can be false. First, the replying person might just have wrong knowledge (maybe vinegar or salt can pass the shell?) - but I don't think this is a problem of the reasoning process, it is just correct reasoning based on a false assumption. What I find more interesting is that frequently, there can be other mechanisms for X to happen - maybe vinegar doesn't have to pass the shell to make the egg peelable? - but the person making the argument overlooks that possibility and goes from "the mechanism for X that I have in mind doesn't work" to the conclusion "X is completely impossible".



Another example would be people who insist that placebo does not help against pain, because per definition, it contains no chemically active substance that acts on pain receptors.



Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process, not a general reason why arguing against vinegar in egg water would be a wrong position to take. (In fact, I don't even know if vinegar in egg water has any effect).










share|improve this question













I have encountered this reasoning quite frequently:



Somebody posits the hypothesis that an event X can happpen. A recent example I encountered was "vinegar and salt in the boiling water make eggs easier to peel afterwards", but I have seen many more. Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen. In that example, the reply could be "salt and vinegar cannot cross the shell, so they will not make the egg easier to peel".



I have seen two ways in which this argument can be false. First, the replying person might just have wrong knowledge (maybe vinegar or salt can pass the shell?) - but I don't think this is a problem of the reasoning process, it is just correct reasoning based on a false assumption. What I find more interesting is that frequently, there can be other mechanisms for X to happen - maybe vinegar doesn't have to pass the shell to make the egg peelable? - but the person making the argument overlooks that possibility and goes from "the mechanism for X that I have in mind doesn't work" to the conclusion "X is completely impossible".



Another example would be people who insist that placebo does not help against pain, because per definition, it contains no chemically active substance that acts on pain receptors.



Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process, not a general reason why arguing against vinegar in egg water would be a wrong position to take. (In fact, I don't even know if vinegar in egg water has any effect).







logic fallacies






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asked Dec 11 at 15:42









rumtscho

25636




25636








  • 3




    I don't think this is always a fallacy. Sure, the "I can't imagine it happening, therefore it can't happen" variant is, but if the person is a subject matter expert (on... vinegar and salt and eggshells, I guess, haha) who actually knows all of the mechanisms through which something could happen, it seems different. That's perhaps less applicable in biology than something more fixed, though.
    – Nic Hartley
    Dec 11 at 20:10






  • 2




    The title and body seem to ask two different questions: the title asks about not being able to imagine any mechanism, while the body is about imagining a single mechanism and then disproving that. Which is it?
    – Todd Sewell
    Dec 11 at 20:19








  • 3




    This is a variation on "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence", but I agree with @NicHartley, in proper context it is not a fallacy at all: "In some circumstances it can be safely assumed that if a certain event had occurred, evidence of it could be discovered by qualified investigators. In such circumstances it is perfectly reasonable to take the absence of proof of its occurrence as positive proof of its non-occurrence." (Copi, Introduction to Logic) Replace "evidence" with "mechanism".
    – Conifold
    Dec 11 at 23:15








  • 2




    @Conifold you are making an interesting point. Your citation is subtly different, I think, because it introduces the matter of evidence of X occuring. My question assumed that the person making the argument does not know if there is evidence of X or not, and just claims that it cannot happen anyway, so is not interested in seeking such evidence. In reality, I have seen cases where evidence for X having happened was presented to the person making the claim, and that person denied that the evidence can be true, based on their reasoning of "it should never happen". So the claimer cannot...
    – rumtscho
    Dec 12 at 10:39






  • 2




    ... be said to be reasoning on the lines of "if it were possible, it would have been observed by now" in these cases - since their reasoning is used to deny the truth of the observation having happened.
    – rumtscho
    Dec 12 at 10:40














  • 3




    I don't think this is always a fallacy. Sure, the "I can't imagine it happening, therefore it can't happen" variant is, but if the person is a subject matter expert (on... vinegar and salt and eggshells, I guess, haha) who actually knows all of the mechanisms through which something could happen, it seems different. That's perhaps less applicable in biology than something more fixed, though.
    – Nic Hartley
    Dec 11 at 20:10






  • 2




    The title and body seem to ask two different questions: the title asks about not being able to imagine any mechanism, while the body is about imagining a single mechanism and then disproving that. Which is it?
    – Todd Sewell
    Dec 11 at 20:19








  • 3




    This is a variation on "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence", but I agree with @NicHartley, in proper context it is not a fallacy at all: "In some circumstances it can be safely assumed that if a certain event had occurred, evidence of it could be discovered by qualified investigators. In such circumstances it is perfectly reasonable to take the absence of proof of its occurrence as positive proof of its non-occurrence." (Copi, Introduction to Logic) Replace "evidence" with "mechanism".
    – Conifold
    Dec 11 at 23:15








  • 2




    @Conifold you are making an interesting point. Your citation is subtly different, I think, because it introduces the matter of evidence of X occuring. My question assumed that the person making the argument does not know if there is evidence of X or not, and just claims that it cannot happen anyway, so is not interested in seeking such evidence. In reality, I have seen cases where evidence for X having happened was presented to the person making the claim, and that person denied that the evidence can be true, based on their reasoning of "it should never happen". So the claimer cannot...
    – rumtscho
    Dec 12 at 10:39






  • 2




    ... be said to be reasoning on the lines of "if it were possible, it would have been observed by now" in these cases - since their reasoning is used to deny the truth of the observation having happened.
    – rumtscho
    Dec 12 at 10:40








3




3




I don't think this is always a fallacy. Sure, the "I can't imagine it happening, therefore it can't happen" variant is, but if the person is a subject matter expert (on... vinegar and salt and eggshells, I guess, haha) who actually knows all of the mechanisms through which something could happen, it seems different. That's perhaps less applicable in biology than something more fixed, though.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 11 at 20:10




I don't think this is always a fallacy. Sure, the "I can't imagine it happening, therefore it can't happen" variant is, but if the person is a subject matter expert (on... vinegar and salt and eggshells, I guess, haha) who actually knows all of the mechanisms through which something could happen, it seems different. That's perhaps less applicable in biology than something more fixed, though.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 11 at 20:10




2




2




The title and body seem to ask two different questions: the title asks about not being able to imagine any mechanism, while the body is about imagining a single mechanism and then disproving that. Which is it?
– Todd Sewell
Dec 11 at 20:19






The title and body seem to ask two different questions: the title asks about not being able to imagine any mechanism, while the body is about imagining a single mechanism and then disproving that. Which is it?
– Todd Sewell
Dec 11 at 20:19






3




3




This is a variation on "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence", but I agree with @NicHartley, in proper context it is not a fallacy at all: "In some circumstances it can be safely assumed that if a certain event had occurred, evidence of it could be discovered by qualified investigators. In such circumstances it is perfectly reasonable to take the absence of proof of its occurrence as positive proof of its non-occurrence." (Copi, Introduction to Logic) Replace "evidence" with "mechanism".
– Conifold
Dec 11 at 23:15






This is a variation on "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence", but I agree with @NicHartley, in proper context it is not a fallacy at all: "In some circumstances it can be safely assumed that if a certain event had occurred, evidence of it could be discovered by qualified investigators. In such circumstances it is perfectly reasonable to take the absence of proof of its occurrence as positive proof of its non-occurrence." (Copi, Introduction to Logic) Replace "evidence" with "mechanism".
– Conifold
Dec 11 at 23:15






2




2




@Conifold you are making an interesting point. Your citation is subtly different, I think, because it introduces the matter of evidence of X occuring. My question assumed that the person making the argument does not know if there is evidence of X or not, and just claims that it cannot happen anyway, so is not interested in seeking such evidence. In reality, I have seen cases where evidence for X having happened was presented to the person making the claim, and that person denied that the evidence can be true, based on their reasoning of "it should never happen". So the claimer cannot...
– rumtscho
Dec 12 at 10:39




@Conifold you are making an interesting point. Your citation is subtly different, I think, because it introduces the matter of evidence of X occuring. My question assumed that the person making the argument does not know if there is evidence of X or not, and just claims that it cannot happen anyway, so is not interested in seeking such evidence. In reality, I have seen cases where evidence for X having happened was presented to the person making the claim, and that person denied that the evidence can be true, based on their reasoning of "it should never happen". So the claimer cannot...
– rumtscho
Dec 12 at 10:39




2




2




... be said to be reasoning on the lines of "if it were possible, it would have been observed by now" in these cases - since their reasoning is used to deny the truth of the observation having happened.
– rumtscho
Dec 12 at 10:40




... be said to be reasoning on the lines of "if it were possible, it would have been observed by now" in these cases - since their reasoning is used to deny the truth of the observation having happened.
– rumtscho
Dec 12 at 10:40










5 Answers
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This fallacy is generally called argument from incredulity, or argument from failure of imagination. https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argument_from_incredulity It also is a subset of the argument from ignorance. Informal fallacies often overlap, and bleed into each other.



This fallacy is a common one,even among respected philosophers, as it is a characteristic of people that we are poor at identifying our own blindspots. And example of this mistake in a major philosopher is Jaegwon Kim's Pairing Problem argument, where point 3b and 4 is an argument from failure of imagination:





  1. For substance dualism to be intelligible, the mental and the physical must be able to causally interact.

  2. If there is causal interaction between any two events (say the
    mental act of the immaterial entity and the physical act of the material en
    tity), then there must be a pairing relation between them.

  3. In all physical cases, the specific spatial relations between relata allow us
    to pick out the appropriate pairing relation, either by having direct spatial relations or by being connected by a spatially contiguous chain of events. There seems to be nothing else that can play this role.

  4. Thus, it is highly likely pairing relations are only possible when both entities involved occupy specific spatial coordinates.

  5. The events in mental-to-physical causation in substance dualism do not both occupy specific spatial coordinates. Thus, there seems to be no way to construct the appropriate causal pairing relation in these cases.

  6. Thus, substance dualism is not intelligible.




What makes this a fallacy by Kim is because he does not test and support his assumption that location, and location alone, allows for pairing. For example, matter pairs, even though at the heisenberg scale -- matter is not fully localized. And even though matter is localized at the macro scale, it does not always pair -- as waves and fields can and do superimpose. Plus, with stream f consciousness, reasoning, and math, we have examples of apprently non-localized exclusions and causation (hence pairing). What all these examples show is that while location is often useful to achieve pairing, it is not always sufficient, nor the only way to do pairing.






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  • 1




    I edited the formatting, but I don't know where "3b" came from. Perhaps it is a typo. Please roll back if I did this incorrectly.
    – Frank Hubeny
    Dec 11 at 19:31






  • 2




    Point 3 has two sentences. The first is a generalized statement of facts. The second one is an argument from ignorance/failure-of-imagination, which then is repeated in 4. I hoped that by labeling it 3b, I would make it clear that the first sentence in 3 is not this fallacy. But ... good intentions are often not successful ...
    – Dcleve
    Dec 11 at 19:37










  • so if I apply modus ponens in an argument, or any other common inferential rule, because I can't imagine it being false and take it for granted, am I guilty of this fallacy?
    – Hasse1987
    Dec 12 at 1:38










  • @Hasse1987, I don't think I understand what you are asking. Modus Ponens is not a fallacy. Inference is not a fallacy. Making an inference, and asserting its conclusions are true, while ignoring other logical possibilities -- that is a fallacy.
    – Dcleve
    Dec 12 at 1:52






  • 2




    Can you elaborate as to how stream of consciousness, reasoning, and math are non-localized exclusions, and particularly causation? In particular, I think math isn't understood to be causal in itself: it's a formal system that can be physically manifested in a variety of (presumably causal) settings. Unless you mean the mental processes underlying mathematical reasoning?
    – Obie 2.0
    Dec 12 at 17:23




















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13
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Argument from incredulity (aka: appeal to common sense) :




I cannot imagine how P could be true; therefore P must be false.







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    up vote
    10
    down vote













    The argument you discuss in the title is a form of argument from ignorance, but the example you give of




    Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen.




    is a form of denying the antecedent: "If Y were true, then X could happen, but Y is not true, therefore X can't happen." Argument from ignorance and denying the antecedent are somewhat similar fallacies, and argument from ignorance could be considered to be a form of denying the antecedent: "If I knew of evidence that X is true, then I should accept X, but I don't know of such evidence, so I shouldn't accept X."






    share|improve this answer





















    • It could also be considered a straw man argument - they're taking your argument that X occurs, declaring that it must happen by some process Y, and then refuting Y as a way to refute X.
      – anaximander
      Dec 13 at 14:45


















    up vote
    9
    down vote













    Because a claim is made from ignorance (or even partial ignorance) this argument could be classified as an argument from ignorance.



    However, not all arguments from ignorance are fallacious. Some may simply be weak arguments. Douglas Walton notes the following: (page 272)




    In an inquiry, the argumentum ad ignorantiam for a particular proposition becomes stronger and stronger as the knowledge cumulated by the inquiry becomes more and more firmly established. However, even at the beginning stages of an inquiry, where very little is known about a subject or hypothesis, the argumentum ad ignorantiam can still be a correct, even if weak, kind of argument. It can be a speculative argument that only yields a small degree of plausibility for its conclusion. Even so, in such a case, it can be a correct, as opposed to an erroneous argument.




    Where do such arguments go wrong? It is not just the presence of the argument but "its misemployment as a tactic to make an argument seem (unjustifiably) stronger than it really is." (page 274)




    Locke's insight brought out this tactical element very well when he wrote (Hamblin, 1970,60) that men use the argumentum ad ignorantiam to "drive" others and "force" them to "submit" in debate.




    Here is the question: Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process...



    An appropriate name would likely be "argument from ignorance". Such an argument might be weak. For it to be considered erroneous or a fallacy, however, requires a context where the one using the argument from ignorance is driving others to submit in debate. Just using the argument by itself is not enough for there to be fallacious reasoning.





    Walton, D. (1996). Arguments from ignorance. Penn State Press.






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      up vote
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      down vote













      Straw Man



      The wording "Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible" is what makes this a form of straw-man argument. The person imagining Y is the mechanism by which X is to be accomplished has thus changed the proposition from "X" to "X by means of Y", and thus by refuting Y, he believes he's refuted X as well.



      If, historically, people have tried to accomplish X by method Y (and failed due to defects in Y), this is not an unreasonable reaction to X, so X proponents need to consider clarifying the original statement of X to exclude Y as the method, and if possible offer method Z to distinguish this X advocacy from those historical XY failures. If unable to do the latter, it's still true that even if Y is proven to be unable to produce X, that doesn't provide any information about other X methods.






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      • I honestly think your post does not add a slight bit of information to be even tangentially referred to as an answer. I said this without a slight intention to offend you. I am not downvoting it solely because you tried to explain something at least.
        – Bertrand Wittgenstein's Ghost
        Dec 14 at 6:43












      • A straw man is an attack on a different argument than the one presented. The question is regarding an attack on the mechanism through which the claimed action occurs, which is directly related to the claim. It is therefore not a straw man.
        – Baldrickk
        Dec 14 at 8:39











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      5 Answers
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      This fallacy is generally called argument from incredulity, or argument from failure of imagination. https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argument_from_incredulity It also is a subset of the argument from ignorance. Informal fallacies often overlap, and bleed into each other.



      This fallacy is a common one,even among respected philosophers, as it is a characteristic of people that we are poor at identifying our own blindspots. And example of this mistake in a major philosopher is Jaegwon Kim's Pairing Problem argument, where point 3b and 4 is an argument from failure of imagination:





      1. For substance dualism to be intelligible, the mental and the physical must be able to causally interact.

      2. If there is causal interaction between any two events (say the
        mental act of the immaterial entity and the physical act of the material en
        tity), then there must be a pairing relation between them.

      3. In all physical cases, the specific spatial relations between relata allow us
        to pick out the appropriate pairing relation, either by having direct spatial relations or by being connected by a spatially contiguous chain of events. There seems to be nothing else that can play this role.

      4. Thus, it is highly likely pairing relations are only possible when both entities involved occupy specific spatial coordinates.

      5. The events in mental-to-physical causation in substance dualism do not both occupy specific spatial coordinates. Thus, there seems to be no way to construct the appropriate causal pairing relation in these cases.

      6. Thus, substance dualism is not intelligible.




      What makes this a fallacy by Kim is because he does not test and support his assumption that location, and location alone, allows for pairing. For example, matter pairs, even though at the heisenberg scale -- matter is not fully localized. And even though matter is localized at the macro scale, it does not always pair -- as waves and fields can and do superimpose. Plus, with stream f consciousness, reasoning, and math, we have examples of apprently non-localized exclusions and causation (hence pairing). What all these examples show is that while location is often useful to achieve pairing, it is not always sufficient, nor the only way to do pairing.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1




        I edited the formatting, but I don't know where "3b" came from. Perhaps it is a typo. Please roll back if I did this incorrectly.
        – Frank Hubeny
        Dec 11 at 19:31






      • 2




        Point 3 has two sentences. The first is a generalized statement of facts. The second one is an argument from ignorance/failure-of-imagination, which then is repeated in 4. I hoped that by labeling it 3b, I would make it clear that the first sentence in 3 is not this fallacy. But ... good intentions are often not successful ...
        – Dcleve
        Dec 11 at 19:37










      • so if I apply modus ponens in an argument, or any other common inferential rule, because I can't imagine it being false and take it for granted, am I guilty of this fallacy?
        – Hasse1987
        Dec 12 at 1:38










      • @Hasse1987, I don't think I understand what you are asking. Modus Ponens is not a fallacy. Inference is not a fallacy. Making an inference, and asserting its conclusions are true, while ignoring other logical possibilities -- that is a fallacy.
        – Dcleve
        Dec 12 at 1:52






      • 2




        Can you elaborate as to how stream of consciousness, reasoning, and math are non-localized exclusions, and particularly causation? In particular, I think math isn't understood to be causal in itself: it's a formal system that can be physically manifested in a variety of (presumably causal) settings. Unless you mean the mental processes underlying mathematical reasoning?
        – Obie 2.0
        Dec 12 at 17:23

















      up vote
      28
      down vote













      This fallacy is generally called argument from incredulity, or argument from failure of imagination. https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argument_from_incredulity It also is a subset of the argument from ignorance. Informal fallacies often overlap, and bleed into each other.



      This fallacy is a common one,even among respected philosophers, as it is a characteristic of people that we are poor at identifying our own blindspots. And example of this mistake in a major philosopher is Jaegwon Kim's Pairing Problem argument, where point 3b and 4 is an argument from failure of imagination:





      1. For substance dualism to be intelligible, the mental and the physical must be able to causally interact.

      2. If there is causal interaction between any two events (say the
        mental act of the immaterial entity and the physical act of the material en
        tity), then there must be a pairing relation between them.

      3. In all physical cases, the specific spatial relations between relata allow us
        to pick out the appropriate pairing relation, either by having direct spatial relations or by being connected by a spatially contiguous chain of events. There seems to be nothing else that can play this role.

      4. Thus, it is highly likely pairing relations are only possible when both entities involved occupy specific spatial coordinates.

      5. The events in mental-to-physical causation in substance dualism do not both occupy specific spatial coordinates. Thus, there seems to be no way to construct the appropriate causal pairing relation in these cases.

      6. Thus, substance dualism is not intelligible.




      What makes this a fallacy by Kim is because he does not test and support his assumption that location, and location alone, allows for pairing. For example, matter pairs, even though at the heisenberg scale -- matter is not fully localized. And even though matter is localized at the macro scale, it does not always pair -- as waves and fields can and do superimpose. Plus, with stream f consciousness, reasoning, and math, we have examples of apprently non-localized exclusions and causation (hence pairing). What all these examples show is that while location is often useful to achieve pairing, it is not always sufficient, nor the only way to do pairing.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1




        I edited the formatting, but I don't know where "3b" came from. Perhaps it is a typo. Please roll back if I did this incorrectly.
        – Frank Hubeny
        Dec 11 at 19:31






      • 2




        Point 3 has two sentences. The first is a generalized statement of facts. The second one is an argument from ignorance/failure-of-imagination, which then is repeated in 4. I hoped that by labeling it 3b, I would make it clear that the first sentence in 3 is not this fallacy. But ... good intentions are often not successful ...
        – Dcleve
        Dec 11 at 19:37










      • so if I apply modus ponens in an argument, or any other common inferential rule, because I can't imagine it being false and take it for granted, am I guilty of this fallacy?
        – Hasse1987
        Dec 12 at 1:38










      • @Hasse1987, I don't think I understand what you are asking. Modus Ponens is not a fallacy. Inference is not a fallacy. Making an inference, and asserting its conclusions are true, while ignoring other logical possibilities -- that is a fallacy.
        – Dcleve
        Dec 12 at 1:52






      • 2




        Can you elaborate as to how stream of consciousness, reasoning, and math are non-localized exclusions, and particularly causation? In particular, I think math isn't understood to be causal in itself: it's a formal system that can be physically manifested in a variety of (presumably causal) settings. Unless you mean the mental processes underlying mathematical reasoning?
        – Obie 2.0
        Dec 12 at 17:23















      up vote
      28
      down vote










      up vote
      28
      down vote









      This fallacy is generally called argument from incredulity, or argument from failure of imagination. https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argument_from_incredulity It also is a subset of the argument from ignorance. Informal fallacies often overlap, and bleed into each other.



      This fallacy is a common one,even among respected philosophers, as it is a characteristic of people that we are poor at identifying our own blindspots. And example of this mistake in a major philosopher is Jaegwon Kim's Pairing Problem argument, where point 3b and 4 is an argument from failure of imagination:





      1. For substance dualism to be intelligible, the mental and the physical must be able to causally interact.

      2. If there is causal interaction between any two events (say the
        mental act of the immaterial entity and the physical act of the material en
        tity), then there must be a pairing relation between them.

      3. In all physical cases, the specific spatial relations between relata allow us
        to pick out the appropriate pairing relation, either by having direct spatial relations or by being connected by a spatially contiguous chain of events. There seems to be nothing else that can play this role.

      4. Thus, it is highly likely pairing relations are only possible when both entities involved occupy specific spatial coordinates.

      5. The events in mental-to-physical causation in substance dualism do not both occupy specific spatial coordinates. Thus, there seems to be no way to construct the appropriate causal pairing relation in these cases.

      6. Thus, substance dualism is not intelligible.




      What makes this a fallacy by Kim is because he does not test and support his assumption that location, and location alone, allows for pairing. For example, matter pairs, even though at the heisenberg scale -- matter is not fully localized. And even though matter is localized at the macro scale, it does not always pair -- as waves and fields can and do superimpose. Plus, with stream f consciousness, reasoning, and math, we have examples of apprently non-localized exclusions and causation (hence pairing). What all these examples show is that while location is often useful to achieve pairing, it is not always sufficient, nor the only way to do pairing.






      share|improve this answer














      This fallacy is generally called argument from incredulity, or argument from failure of imagination. https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Argument_from_incredulity It also is a subset of the argument from ignorance. Informal fallacies often overlap, and bleed into each other.



      This fallacy is a common one,even among respected philosophers, as it is a characteristic of people that we are poor at identifying our own blindspots. And example of this mistake in a major philosopher is Jaegwon Kim's Pairing Problem argument, where point 3b and 4 is an argument from failure of imagination:





      1. For substance dualism to be intelligible, the mental and the physical must be able to causally interact.

      2. If there is causal interaction between any two events (say the
        mental act of the immaterial entity and the physical act of the material en
        tity), then there must be a pairing relation between them.

      3. In all physical cases, the specific spatial relations between relata allow us
        to pick out the appropriate pairing relation, either by having direct spatial relations or by being connected by a spatially contiguous chain of events. There seems to be nothing else that can play this role.

      4. Thus, it is highly likely pairing relations are only possible when both entities involved occupy specific spatial coordinates.

      5. The events in mental-to-physical causation in substance dualism do not both occupy specific spatial coordinates. Thus, there seems to be no way to construct the appropriate causal pairing relation in these cases.

      6. Thus, substance dualism is not intelligible.




      What makes this a fallacy by Kim is because he does not test and support his assumption that location, and location alone, allows for pairing. For example, matter pairs, even though at the heisenberg scale -- matter is not fully localized. And even though matter is localized at the macro scale, it does not always pair -- as waves and fields can and do superimpose. Plus, with stream f consciousness, reasoning, and math, we have examples of apprently non-localized exclusions and causation (hence pairing). What all these examples show is that while location is often useful to achieve pairing, it is not always sufficient, nor the only way to do pairing.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Dec 12 at 5:43

























      answered Dec 11 at 18:04









      Dcleve

      1,237313




      1,237313








      • 1




        I edited the formatting, but I don't know where "3b" came from. Perhaps it is a typo. Please roll back if I did this incorrectly.
        – Frank Hubeny
        Dec 11 at 19:31






      • 2




        Point 3 has two sentences. The first is a generalized statement of facts. The second one is an argument from ignorance/failure-of-imagination, which then is repeated in 4. I hoped that by labeling it 3b, I would make it clear that the first sentence in 3 is not this fallacy. But ... good intentions are often not successful ...
        – Dcleve
        Dec 11 at 19:37










      • so if I apply modus ponens in an argument, or any other common inferential rule, because I can't imagine it being false and take it for granted, am I guilty of this fallacy?
        – Hasse1987
        Dec 12 at 1:38










      • @Hasse1987, I don't think I understand what you are asking. Modus Ponens is not a fallacy. Inference is not a fallacy. Making an inference, and asserting its conclusions are true, while ignoring other logical possibilities -- that is a fallacy.
        – Dcleve
        Dec 12 at 1:52






      • 2




        Can you elaborate as to how stream of consciousness, reasoning, and math are non-localized exclusions, and particularly causation? In particular, I think math isn't understood to be causal in itself: it's a formal system that can be physically manifested in a variety of (presumably causal) settings. Unless you mean the mental processes underlying mathematical reasoning?
        – Obie 2.0
        Dec 12 at 17:23
















      • 1




        I edited the formatting, but I don't know where "3b" came from. Perhaps it is a typo. Please roll back if I did this incorrectly.
        – Frank Hubeny
        Dec 11 at 19:31






      • 2




        Point 3 has two sentences. The first is a generalized statement of facts. The second one is an argument from ignorance/failure-of-imagination, which then is repeated in 4. I hoped that by labeling it 3b, I would make it clear that the first sentence in 3 is not this fallacy. But ... good intentions are often not successful ...
        – Dcleve
        Dec 11 at 19:37










      • so if I apply modus ponens in an argument, or any other common inferential rule, because I can't imagine it being false and take it for granted, am I guilty of this fallacy?
        – Hasse1987
        Dec 12 at 1:38










      • @Hasse1987, I don't think I understand what you are asking. Modus Ponens is not a fallacy. Inference is not a fallacy. Making an inference, and asserting its conclusions are true, while ignoring other logical possibilities -- that is a fallacy.
        – Dcleve
        Dec 12 at 1:52






      • 2




        Can you elaborate as to how stream of consciousness, reasoning, and math are non-localized exclusions, and particularly causation? In particular, I think math isn't understood to be causal in itself: it's a formal system that can be physically manifested in a variety of (presumably causal) settings. Unless you mean the mental processes underlying mathematical reasoning?
        – Obie 2.0
        Dec 12 at 17:23










      1




      1




      I edited the formatting, but I don't know where "3b" came from. Perhaps it is a typo. Please roll back if I did this incorrectly.
      – Frank Hubeny
      Dec 11 at 19:31




      I edited the formatting, but I don't know where "3b" came from. Perhaps it is a typo. Please roll back if I did this incorrectly.
      – Frank Hubeny
      Dec 11 at 19:31




      2




      2




      Point 3 has two sentences. The first is a generalized statement of facts. The second one is an argument from ignorance/failure-of-imagination, which then is repeated in 4. I hoped that by labeling it 3b, I would make it clear that the first sentence in 3 is not this fallacy. But ... good intentions are often not successful ...
      – Dcleve
      Dec 11 at 19:37




      Point 3 has two sentences. The first is a generalized statement of facts. The second one is an argument from ignorance/failure-of-imagination, which then is repeated in 4. I hoped that by labeling it 3b, I would make it clear that the first sentence in 3 is not this fallacy. But ... good intentions are often not successful ...
      – Dcleve
      Dec 11 at 19:37












      so if I apply modus ponens in an argument, or any other common inferential rule, because I can't imagine it being false and take it for granted, am I guilty of this fallacy?
      – Hasse1987
      Dec 12 at 1:38




      so if I apply modus ponens in an argument, or any other common inferential rule, because I can't imagine it being false and take it for granted, am I guilty of this fallacy?
      – Hasse1987
      Dec 12 at 1:38












      @Hasse1987, I don't think I understand what you are asking. Modus Ponens is not a fallacy. Inference is not a fallacy. Making an inference, and asserting its conclusions are true, while ignoring other logical possibilities -- that is a fallacy.
      – Dcleve
      Dec 12 at 1:52




      @Hasse1987, I don't think I understand what you are asking. Modus Ponens is not a fallacy. Inference is not a fallacy. Making an inference, and asserting its conclusions are true, while ignoring other logical possibilities -- that is a fallacy.
      – Dcleve
      Dec 12 at 1:52




      2




      2




      Can you elaborate as to how stream of consciousness, reasoning, and math are non-localized exclusions, and particularly causation? In particular, I think math isn't understood to be causal in itself: it's a formal system that can be physically manifested in a variety of (presumably causal) settings. Unless you mean the mental processes underlying mathematical reasoning?
      – Obie 2.0
      Dec 12 at 17:23






      Can you elaborate as to how stream of consciousness, reasoning, and math are non-localized exclusions, and particularly causation? In particular, I think math isn't understood to be causal in itself: it's a formal system that can be physically manifested in a variety of (presumably causal) settings. Unless you mean the mental processes underlying mathematical reasoning?
      – Obie 2.0
      Dec 12 at 17:23












      up vote
      13
      down vote













      Argument from incredulity (aka: appeal to common sense) :




      I cannot imagine how P could be true; therefore P must be false.







      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        13
        down vote













        Argument from incredulity (aka: appeal to common sense) :




        I cannot imagine how P could be true; therefore P must be false.







        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          13
          down vote










          up vote
          13
          down vote









          Argument from incredulity (aka: appeal to common sense) :




          I cannot imagine how P could be true; therefore P must be false.







          share|improve this answer












          Argument from incredulity (aka: appeal to common sense) :




          I cannot imagine how P could be true; therefore P must be false.








          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 11 at 15:59









          Mauro ALLEGRANZA

          27.4k21962




          27.4k21962






















              up vote
              10
              down vote













              The argument you discuss in the title is a form of argument from ignorance, but the example you give of




              Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen.




              is a form of denying the antecedent: "If Y were true, then X could happen, but Y is not true, therefore X can't happen." Argument from ignorance and denying the antecedent are somewhat similar fallacies, and argument from ignorance could be considered to be a form of denying the antecedent: "If I knew of evidence that X is true, then I should accept X, but I don't know of such evidence, so I shouldn't accept X."






              share|improve this answer





















              • It could also be considered a straw man argument - they're taking your argument that X occurs, declaring that it must happen by some process Y, and then refuting Y as a way to refute X.
                – anaximander
                Dec 13 at 14:45















              up vote
              10
              down vote













              The argument you discuss in the title is a form of argument from ignorance, but the example you give of




              Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen.




              is a form of denying the antecedent: "If Y were true, then X could happen, but Y is not true, therefore X can't happen." Argument from ignorance and denying the antecedent are somewhat similar fallacies, and argument from ignorance could be considered to be a form of denying the antecedent: "If I knew of evidence that X is true, then I should accept X, but I don't know of such evidence, so I shouldn't accept X."






              share|improve this answer





















              • It could also be considered a straw man argument - they're taking your argument that X occurs, declaring that it must happen by some process Y, and then refuting Y as a way to refute X.
                – anaximander
                Dec 13 at 14:45













              up vote
              10
              down vote










              up vote
              10
              down vote









              The argument you discuss in the title is a form of argument from ignorance, but the example you give of




              Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen.




              is a form of denying the antecedent: "If Y were true, then X could happen, but Y is not true, therefore X can't happen." Argument from ignorance and denying the antecedent are somewhat similar fallacies, and argument from ignorance could be considered to be a form of denying the antecedent: "If I knew of evidence that X is true, then I should accept X, but I don't know of such evidence, so I shouldn't accept X."






              share|improve this answer












              The argument you discuss in the title is a form of argument from ignorance, but the example you give of




              Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible, and claims that X can never happen.




              is a form of denying the antecedent: "If Y were true, then X could happen, but Y is not true, therefore X can't happen." Argument from ignorance and denying the antecedent are somewhat similar fallacies, and argument from ignorance could be considered to be a form of denying the antecedent: "If I knew of evidence that X is true, then I should accept X, but I don't know of such evidence, so I shouldn't accept X."







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Dec 11 at 22:15









              Acccumulation

              55218




              55218












              • It could also be considered a straw man argument - they're taking your argument that X occurs, declaring that it must happen by some process Y, and then refuting Y as a way to refute X.
                – anaximander
                Dec 13 at 14:45


















              • It could also be considered a straw man argument - they're taking your argument that X occurs, declaring that it must happen by some process Y, and then refuting Y as a way to refute X.
                – anaximander
                Dec 13 at 14:45
















              It could also be considered a straw man argument - they're taking your argument that X occurs, declaring that it must happen by some process Y, and then refuting Y as a way to refute X.
              – anaximander
              Dec 13 at 14:45




              It could also be considered a straw man argument - they're taking your argument that X occurs, declaring that it must happen by some process Y, and then refuting Y as a way to refute X.
              – anaximander
              Dec 13 at 14:45










              up vote
              9
              down vote













              Because a claim is made from ignorance (or even partial ignorance) this argument could be classified as an argument from ignorance.



              However, not all arguments from ignorance are fallacious. Some may simply be weak arguments. Douglas Walton notes the following: (page 272)




              In an inquiry, the argumentum ad ignorantiam for a particular proposition becomes stronger and stronger as the knowledge cumulated by the inquiry becomes more and more firmly established. However, even at the beginning stages of an inquiry, where very little is known about a subject or hypothesis, the argumentum ad ignorantiam can still be a correct, even if weak, kind of argument. It can be a speculative argument that only yields a small degree of plausibility for its conclusion. Even so, in such a case, it can be a correct, as opposed to an erroneous argument.




              Where do such arguments go wrong? It is not just the presence of the argument but "its misemployment as a tactic to make an argument seem (unjustifiably) stronger than it really is." (page 274)




              Locke's insight brought out this tactical element very well when he wrote (Hamblin, 1970,60) that men use the argumentum ad ignorantiam to "drive" others and "force" them to "submit" in debate.




              Here is the question: Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process...



              An appropriate name would likely be "argument from ignorance". Such an argument might be weak. For it to be considered erroneous or a fallacy, however, requires a context where the one using the argument from ignorance is driving others to submit in debate. Just using the argument by itself is not enough for there to be fallacious reasoning.





              Walton, D. (1996). Arguments from ignorance. Penn State Press.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                9
                down vote













                Because a claim is made from ignorance (or even partial ignorance) this argument could be classified as an argument from ignorance.



                However, not all arguments from ignorance are fallacious. Some may simply be weak arguments. Douglas Walton notes the following: (page 272)




                In an inquiry, the argumentum ad ignorantiam for a particular proposition becomes stronger and stronger as the knowledge cumulated by the inquiry becomes more and more firmly established. However, even at the beginning stages of an inquiry, where very little is known about a subject or hypothesis, the argumentum ad ignorantiam can still be a correct, even if weak, kind of argument. It can be a speculative argument that only yields a small degree of plausibility for its conclusion. Even so, in such a case, it can be a correct, as opposed to an erroneous argument.




                Where do such arguments go wrong? It is not just the presence of the argument but "its misemployment as a tactic to make an argument seem (unjustifiably) stronger than it really is." (page 274)




                Locke's insight brought out this tactical element very well when he wrote (Hamblin, 1970,60) that men use the argumentum ad ignorantiam to "drive" others and "force" them to "submit" in debate.




                Here is the question: Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process...



                An appropriate name would likely be "argument from ignorance". Such an argument might be weak. For it to be considered erroneous or a fallacy, however, requires a context where the one using the argument from ignorance is driving others to submit in debate. Just using the argument by itself is not enough for there to be fallacious reasoning.





                Walton, D. (1996). Arguments from ignorance. Penn State Press.






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  9
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  9
                  down vote









                  Because a claim is made from ignorance (or even partial ignorance) this argument could be classified as an argument from ignorance.



                  However, not all arguments from ignorance are fallacious. Some may simply be weak arguments. Douglas Walton notes the following: (page 272)




                  In an inquiry, the argumentum ad ignorantiam for a particular proposition becomes stronger and stronger as the knowledge cumulated by the inquiry becomes more and more firmly established. However, even at the beginning stages of an inquiry, where very little is known about a subject or hypothesis, the argumentum ad ignorantiam can still be a correct, even if weak, kind of argument. It can be a speculative argument that only yields a small degree of plausibility for its conclusion. Even so, in such a case, it can be a correct, as opposed to an erroneous argument.




                  Where do such arguments go wrong? It is not just the presence of the argument but "its misemployment as a tactic to make an argument seem (unjustifiably) stronger than it really is." (page 274)




                  Locke's insight brought out this tactical element very well when he wrote (Hamblin, 1970,60) that men use the argumentum ad ignorantiam to "drive" others and "force" them to "submit" in debate.




                  Here is the question: Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process...



                  An appropriate name would likely be "argument from ignorance". Such an argument might be weak. For it to be considered erroneous or a fallacy, however, requires a context where the one using the argument from ignorance is driving others to submit in debate. Just using the argument by itself is not enough for there to be fallacious reasoning.





                  Walton, D. (1996). Arguments from ignorance. Penn State Press.






                  share|improve this answer












                  Because a claim is made from ignorance (or even partial ignorance) this argument could be classified as an argument from ignorance.



                  However, not all arguments from ignorance are fallacious. Some may simply be weak arguments. Douglas Walton notes the following: (page 272)




                  In an inquiry, the argumentum ad ignorantiam for a particular proposition becomes stronger and stronger as the knowledge cumulated by the inquiry becomes more and more firmly established. However, even at the beginning stages of an inquiry, where very little is known about a subject or hypothesis, the argumentum ad ignorantiam can still be a correct, even if weak, kind of argument. It can be a speculative argument that only yields a small degree of plausibility for its conclusion. Even so, in such a case, it can be a correct, as opposed to an erroneous argument.




                  Where do such arguments go wrong? It is not just the presence of the argument but "its misemployment as a tactic to make an argument seem (unjustifiably) stronger than it really is." (page 274)




                  Locke's insight brought out this tactical element very well when he wrote (Hamblin, 1970,60) that men use the argumentum ad ignorantiam to "drive" others and "force" them to "submit" in debate.




                  Here is the question: Has this flaw in reasoning received a recognizable name? I am asking specifically about fallacies as they apply to a formal reasoning process...



                  An appropriate name would likely be "argument from ignorance". Such an argument might be weak. For it to be considered erroneous or a fallacy, however, requires a context where the one using the argument from ignorance is driving others to submit in debate. Just using the argument by itself is not enough for there to be fallacious reasoning.





                  Walton, D. (1996). Arguments from ignorance. Penn State Press.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Dec 11 at 20:29









                  Frank Hubeny

                  6,54251344




                  6,54251344






















                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote













                      Straw Man



                      The wording "Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible" is what makes this a form of straw-man argument. The person imagining Y is the mechanism by which X is to be accomplished has thus changed the proposition from "X" to "X by means of Y", and thus by refuting Y, he believes he's refuted X as well.



                      If, historically, people have tried to accomplish X by method Y (and failed due to defects in Y), this is not an unreasonable reaction to X, so X proponents need to consider clarifying the original statement of X to exclude Y as the method, and if possible offer method Z to distinguish this X advocacy from those historical XY failures. If unable to do the latter, it's still true that even if Y is proven to be unable to produce X, that doesn't provide any information about other X methods.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      Monty Harder is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.


















                      • I honestly think your post does not add a slight bit of information to be even tangentially referred to as an answer. I said this without a slight intention to offend you. I am not downvoting it solely because you tried to explain something at least.
                        – Bertrand Wittgenstein's Ghost
                        Dec 14 at 6:43












                      • A straw man is an attack on a different argument than the one presented. The question is regarding an attack on the mechanism through which the claimed action occurs, which is directly related to the claim. It is therefore not a straw man.
                        – Baldrickk
                        Dec 14 at 8:39















                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote













                      Straw Man



                      The wording "Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible" is what makes this a form of straw-man argument. The person imagining Y is the mechanism by which X is to be accomplished has thus changed the proposition from "X" to "X by means of Y", and thus by refuting Y, he believes he's refuted X as well.



                      If, historically, people have tried to accomplish X by method Y (and failed due to defects in Y), this is not an unreasonable reaction to X, so X proponents need to consider clarifying the original statement of X to exclude Y as the method, and if possible offer method Z to distinguish this X advocacy from those historical XY failures. If unable to do the latter, it's still true that even if Y is proven to be unable to produce X, that doesn't provide any information about other X methods.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      Monty Harder is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.


















                      • I honestly think your post does not add a slight bit of information to be even tangentially referred to as an answer. I said this without a slight intention to offend you. I am not downvoting it solely because you tried to explain something at least.
                        – Bertrand Wittgenstein's Ghost
                        Dec 14 at 6:43












                      • A straw man is an attack on a different argument than the one presented. The question is regarding an attack on the mechanism through which the claimed action occurs, which is directly related to the claim. It is therefore not a straw man.
                        – Baldrickk
                        Dec 14 at 8:39













                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote









                      Straw Man



                      The wording "Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible" is what makes this a form of straw-man argument. The person imagining Y is the mechanism by which X is to be accomplished has thus changed the proposition from "X" to "X by means of Y", and thus by refuting Y, he believes he's refuted X as well.



                      If, historically, people have tried to accomplish X by method Y (and failed due to defects in Y), this is not an unreasonable reaction to X, so X proponents need to consider clarifying the original statement of X to exclude Y as the method, and if possible offer method Z to distinguish this X advocacy from those historical XY failures. If unable to do the latter, it's still true that even if Y is proven to be unable to produce X, that doesn't provide any information about other X methods.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




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                      Straw Man



                      The wording "Another person imagines a way in which it could happen, judges that way to be impossible" is what makes this a form of straw-man argument. The person imagining Y is the mechanism by which X is to be accomplished has thus changed the proposition from "X" to "X by means of Y", and thus by refuting Y, he believes he's refuted X as well.



                      If, historically, people have tried to accomplish X by method Y (and failed due to defects in Y), this is not an unreasonable reaction to X, so X proponents need to consider clarifying the original statement of X to exclude Y as the method, and if possible offer method Z to distinguish this X advocacy from those historical XY failures. If unable to do the latter, it's still true that even if Y is proven to be unable to produce X, that doesn't provide any information about other X methods.







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                      answered Dec 12 at 18:44









                      Monty Harder

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                      • I honestly think your post does not add a slight bit of information to be even tangentially referred to as an answer. I said this without a slight intention to offend you. I am not downvoting it solely because you tried to explain something at least.
                        – Bertrand Wittgenstein's Ghost
                        Dec 14 at 6:43












                      • A straw man is an attack on a different argument than the one presented. The question is regarding an attack on the mechanism through which the claimed action occurs, which is directly related to the claim. It is therefore not a straw man.
                        – Baldrickk
                        Dec 14 at 8:39


















                      • I honestly think your post does not add a slight bit of information to be even tangentially referred to as an answer. I said this without a slight intention to offend you. I am not downvoting it solely because you tried to explain something at least.
                        – Bertrand Wittgenstein's Ghost
                        Dec 14 at 6:43












                      • A straw man is an attack on a different argument than the one presented. The question is regarding an attack on the mechanism through which the claimed action occurs, which is directly related to the claim. It is therefore not a straw man.
                        – Baldrickk
                        Dec 14 at 8:39
















                      I honestly think your post does not add a slight bit of information to be even tangentially referred to as an answer. I said this without a slight intention to offend you. I am not downvoting it solely because you tried to explain something at least.
                      – Bertrand Wittgenstein's Ghost
                      Dec 14 at 6:43






                      I honestly think your post does not add a slight bit of information to be even tangentially referred to as an answer. I said this without a slight intention to offend you. I am not downvoting it solely because you tried to explain something at least.
                      – Bertrand Wittgenstein's Ghost
                      Dec 14 at 6:43














                      A straw man is an attack on a different argument than the one presented. The question is regarding an attack on the mechanism through which the claimed action occurs, which is directly related to the claim. It is therefore not a straw man.
                      – Baldrickk
                      Dec 14 at 8:39




                      A straw man is an attack on a different argument than the one presented. The question is regarding an attack on the mechanism through which the claimed action occurs, which is directly related to the claim. It is therefore not a straw man.
                      – Baldrickk
                      Dec 14 at 8:39


















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