The Fake, the Flimsy, and the Fallacious: Demarcating Arguments in Real Life
http://philpapers.org/rec/BOUTFT

Abstract        
Philosophers of science have given up on the quest for a silver bullet to put 
an end to all pseudoscience, as such a neat formal criterion to separate good 
science from its contenders has proven elusive. In the literature on critical 
thinking and in some philosophical quarters, however, this search for silver 
bullets lives on in the taxonomies of fallacies. The attractive idea is to have 
a handy list of abstract definitions or argumentation schemes, on the basis of 
which one can identify bad or invalid types of reasoning, abstracting away from 
the specific content and dialectical context. Such shortcuts for debunking 
arguments are tempting, but alas, the promise is hardly if ever fulfilled. 
Different strands of research on the pragmatics of argumentation, probabilistic 
reasoning and ecological rationality have shown that almost every known type of 
fallacy is a close neighbor to sound inferences or acceptable moves in a 
debate. Nonetheless, the kernel idea of a fallacy as an erroneou
s type of argument is still retained by most authors. We outline a destructive 
dilemma we refer to as the Fallacy Fork: on the one hand, if fallacies are 
construed as demonstrably invalid form of reasoning, then they have very 
limited applicability in real life . On the other hand, if our definitions of 
fallacies are sophisticated enough to capture real-life complexities, they can 
no longer be held up as an effective tool for discriminating good and bad forms 
of reasoning. As we bring our schematic “fallacies” in touch with reality, we 
seem to lose grip on normative questions. Even approaches that do not rely on 
argumentation schemes to identify fallacies fail to escape the Fallacy Fork, 
and run up against their own version of it.


--
glen ep ropella -- 971-255-2847

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