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Carl Sagan - The Fine Art of Baloney Detection

The document discusses skepticism towards claims of contacting the dead and ideas of life after death. It questions how channelers never provide verifiable information from famous deceased individuals. It also analyzes the idea that in an infinitely old universe, identical situations may recur including meeting deceased loved ones again.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views12 pages

Carl Sagan - The Fine Art of Baloney Detection

The document discusses skepticism towards claims of contacting the dead and ideas of life after death. It questions how channelers never provide verifiable information from famous deceased individuals. It also analyzes the idea that in an infinitely old universe, identical situations may recur including meeting deceased loved ones again.

Uploaded by

Suv Zerom
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Fine Art of Baloney Detection by Carl Sagan

[Editorial note: This is taken from the book The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark.]

M !arents died ears a"o. # $as %er close to them. # still miss them terribl . # kno$ # al$a s $ill. # lon" to belie%e that their essence& their !ersonalities& $hat # lo%ed so much about them& are ' reall and trul ' still in e(istence some$here. # $ouldn)t ask %er much& *ust fi%e or ten minutes a ear& sa & to tell them about their "randchildren& to catch them u! on the latest ne$s& to remind them that # lo%e them. There)s a !art of me ' no matter ho$ childish it sounds ' that $onders ho$ the are. +#s e%er thin" all ri"ht,+ # $ant to ask. The last $ords # found m self sa in" to m father& at the moment of his death& $ere +Take care.+ Sometimes # dream that #)m talkin" to m !arents& and suddenl ' still immersed in the dream$ork ' #)m sei-ed b the o%er!o$erin" reali-ation that the didn)t reall die& that it)s all been some kind of horrible mistake. Wh & here the are& ali%e and $ell& m father makin" $r *okes& m mother earnestl ad%isin" me to $ear a muffler because the $eather is chill . When # $ake u! # "o throu"h an abbre%iated !rocess of mournin" all o%er a"ain. .lainl & there)s somethin" $ithin me that)s read to belie%e in life after death. /nd it)s not the least bit interested in $hether there)s an sober e%idence for it. So # don)t "uffa$ at the $oman $ho %isits her husband)s "ra%e and chats him u! e%er no$ and then& ma be on the anni%ersar of his death. #t)s not hard to understand. /nd if # ha%e difficulties $ith the ontolo"ical status of $ho she)s talkin" to& that)s all ri"ht. That)s not $hat this is about. This is about humans bein" human. More than a third of /merican adults belie%e that on some le%el the )%e made contact $ith the dead. The number seems to ha%e *um!ed b 01 !ercent bet$een 0233 and 0244. / 5uarter of /mericans belie%e in reincarnation. 6ut that doesn)t mean #)d be $illin" to acce!t the !retensions of a +medium&+ $ho claims to channel the s!irits of the dear de!arted& $hen #)m a$are the !ractice is rife $ith fraud. # kno$ ho$ much # $ant to belie%e that m !arents ha%e *ust abandoned the husks of their bodies& like insects or snakes moltin"& and "one some$here else. # understand that those %er feelin"s mi"ht make me eas !re e%en for an uncle%er con& or for normal !eo!le unfamiliar $ith their unconscious minds& or for those sufferin" from a dissociati%e !s chiatric disorder. 7eluctantl & # rouse some reser%es of ske!ticism. Ho$ is it& # ask m self& that channelers ne%er "i%e us %erifiable information other$ise una%ailable, Wh does /le(ander the 8reat ne%er tell us about the e(act location of his tomb& 9ermat about his :ast Theorem& ;ohn Wilkes 6ooth about the :incoln assassination cons!irac & Hermann 8orin" about the 7eichsta" fire, Wh don)t So!hocles& Democritus& and /ristarchus

dictate their lost books, Don)t the $ish future "enerations to ha%e access to their master!ieces, #f some "ood e%idence for life after death $ere announced& #)d be ea"er to e(amine it< but it $ould ha%e to be real scientific data& not mere anecdote. /s $ith the face on Mars and alien abductions& better the hard truth& # sa & than the comfortin" fantas . /nd in the final tollin" it often turns out that the facts are more comfortin" than the fantas . The fundamental !remise of +channelin"&+ s!iritualism& and other forms of necromanc is that $hen $e die $e don)t. =ot e(actl . Some thinkin"& feelin"& and rememberin" !art of us continues. That $hate%er-it-is ' a soul or s!irit& neither matter nor ener" & but somethin" else ' can& $e are told& re-enter the bodies of human and other bein"s in the future& and so death loses much of its stin". What)s more& $e ha%e an o!!ortunit & if the s!iritualist or channelin" contentions are true& to make contact $ith lo%ed ones $ho ha%e died. ;.>. ?ni"ht of the State of Washin"ton claims to be in touch $ith a @1&AAA- ear-old somebod called +7amtha.+ He s!eaks En"lish %er $ell& usin" ?ni"ht)s ton"ue& li!s and %ocal chords& !roducin" $hat sounds to me to be an accent from the #ndian 7a*. Since most !eo!le kno$ ho$ to talk& and man ' from children to !rofessional actors ' ha%e a re!ertoire of %oices at their command& the sim!lest h !othesis is that Ms. ?ni"ht makes +7amtha+ s!eak all b herself& and that she has no contact $ith disembodied entities from the .leistocene #ce /"e. #f there)s e%idence to the contrar & #)d lo%e to hear it. #t $ould be considerabl more im!ressi%e if 7amtha could s!eak b himself& $ithout the assistance of Ms. ?ni"ht)s mouth. 9ailin" that& ho$ mi"ht $e test the claim, BThe actress Shirle Mac:aine attests that 7amtha $as her brother in /tlantis& but that)s another stor .C Su!!ose 7amtha $ere a%ailable for 5uestionin". Could $e %erif $hether he is $ho he sa s he is, Ho$ does he kno$ that he li%ed @1&AAA ears a"o& e%en a!!ro(imatel , What calendar does he em!lo , Who is kee!in" track of the inter%enin" millennia, Thirt -fi%e thousand !lus or minus $hat, What $ere thin"s like @1&AAA ears a"o, Either 7amtha reall is @1&AAA ears old& in $hich case $e disco%er somethin" about that !eriod& or he)s a !hon and he)ll Bor rather she)llC sli! u!. Where did 7amtha li%e, B# kno$ he s!eaks En"lish $ith an #ndian accent& but $here @1&AAA ears a"o did the do that,C What $as the climate, What did 7amtha eat, B/rchaeolo"ists kno$ somethin" about $hat !eo!le ate back then.C What $ere the indi"enous lan"ua"es& and social structure, Who else did 7amtha li%e $ith ' $ife& $i%es& children& "randchildren, What $as the life c cle& the infant mortalit rate& the life e(!ectanc , Did the ha%e birth control, What clothes did the $ear, Ho$ $ere the clothes manufactured, What $ere the most dan"erous !redators, Huntin" and fishin" im!lements and strate"ies, Wea!ons, Endemic se(ism, Deno!hobia and ethnocentrism, /nd if 7amtha came from the +hi"h ci%ili-ation+ of

/tlantis& $here are the lin"uistic& technolo"ical& historical and other details, What $as their $ritin" like, Tell us. #nstead& all $e are offered are banal homilies. Here& to take another e(am!le& is a set of information channeled not from an ancient dead !erson& but from unkno$n non-human entities $ho make cro! circles& as recorded b the *ournalist ;im Schnabel: We are so an(ious at this sinful nation s!readin" lies about us. We do not come in machines& $e do not land on our earth in machines ... We come like the $ind. We are :ife 9orce. :ife 9orce from the "round ... Come here ... We are but a breath a$a ... a breath a$a ... $e are not a million miles a$a ... a :ife 9orce that is lar"er than the ener"ies in our bod . 6ut $e meet at a hi"her le%el of life ... We need no name. We are !arallel to our $orld& alon"side our $orld ... The $alls are broken. T$o men $ill rise from the !ast ... the "reat bear ... the $orld $ill be at !eace. .eo!le !a attention to these !uerile mar%els mainl because the !romise somethin" like old-time reli"ion& but es!eciall life after death& e%en life eternal. / %er different !ros!ect for somethin" like eternal life $as once !ro!osed b the %ersatile 6ritish scientist ;.6.S. Haldane& $ho $as& amon" man other thin"s& one of the founders of !o!ulation "enetics. Haldane ima"ined a far future $hen the stars ha%e darkened and s!ace is mainl filled $ith a cold& thin "as. =e%ertheless& if $e $ait lon" enou"h statistical fluctuations in the densit of this "as $ill occur. E%er immense !eriods of time the fluctuations $ill be sufficient to reconstitute a Fni%erse somethin" like our o$n. #f the Fni%erse is infinitel old& there $ill be an infinite number of such reconstitutions& Haldane !ointed out. So in an infinitel old uni%erse $ith an infinite number of a!!earances of "ala(ies& stars& !lanets& and life& an identical Earth must rea!!ear on $hich ou and all our lo%ed ones $ill be reunited. #)ll be able to see m !arents a"ain and introduce them to the "randchildren the ne%er kne$. /nd all this $ill ha!!en not once& but an infinite number of times. Someho$& thou"h& this does not 5uite offer the consolations of reli"ion. #f none of us is to ha%e an recollection of $hat ha!!ened this time around& the time the reader and # are sharin"& the satisfactions of bodil resurrection& in m ears at least& rin" hollo$. 6ut in this reflection # ha%e underestimated $hat infinit means. #n Haldane)s !icture& there $ill be uni%erses& indeed an infinite number of them& in $hich our brains $ill ha%e full recollection of man !re%ious rounds. Satisfaction is at hand ' tem!ered& thou"h& b the thou"ht of all those other uni%erses $hich $ill also come into e(istence Ba"ain& not once but an infinite number of timesC $ith tra"edies and horrors %astl outstri!!in" an thin" #)%e e(!erienced this turn.

The Consolation of Haldane de!ends& thou"h& on $hat kind of uni%erse $e li%e in& and ma be on such arcana as $hether there)s enou"h matter to e%entuall re%erse the e(!ansion of the uni%erse& and the character of %acuum fluctuations. Those $ith a dee! lon"in" for life after death mi"ht& it seems& de%ote themsel%es to cosmolo" & 5uantum "ra%it & elementar !article !h sics& and transfinite arithmetic. Clement of /le(andria& a 9ather of the earl Church& in his E(hortations to the 8reeks B$ritten around the ear 02AC dismissed !a"an beliefs in $ords that mi"ht toda seem a little ironic: 9ar indeed are $e from allo$in" "ro$n men to listen to such tales. E%en to our o$n children& $hen the are cr in" their heart out& as the sa in" "oes& $e are not in the habit of tellin" fabulous stories to soothe them. #n our time $e ha%e less se%ere standards. We tell children about Santa Claus& the Easter 6unn & and the Tooth 9air for reasons $e think emotionall sound& but then disabuse them of these m ths before the )re "ro$n. Wh retract, 6ecause their $ell-bein" as adults de!ends on them kno$in" the $orld as it reall is. We $orr & and for "ood reason& about adults $ho still belie%e in Santa Claus. En doctrinaire reli"ions& +Men dare not a%o$& e%en to their o$n hearts&+ $rote the !hiloso!her Da%id Hume& the doubts $hich the entertain on such sub*ects. The make a merit of im!licit faith< and dis"uise to themsel%es their real infidelit & b the stron"est asse%erations and the most !ositi%e bi"otr . This infidelit has !rofound moral conse5uences& as the /merican re%olutionar Tom .aine $rote in The /"e of 7eason: #nfidelit does not consist in belie%in"& or in disbelie%in"< it consists in !rofessin" to belie%e $hat one does not belie%e. #t is im!ossible to calculate the moral mischief& if # ma so e(!ress it& that mental l in" has !roduced in societ . When man has so far corru!ted and !rostituted the chastit of his mind& as to subscribe his !rofessional belief to thin"s he does not belie%e& he has !re!ared himself for the commission of e%er other crime. T. H. Hu(le )s formulation $as The foundation of moralit is to ... "i%e u! !retendin" to belie%e that for $hich there is no e%idence& and re!eatin" unintelli"ible !ro!ositions about thin"s be ond the !ossibilities of kno$led"e. Clement& Hume& .aine& and Hu(le $ere all talkin" about reli"ion. 6ut much of $hat the $rote has more "eneral a!!lications ' for e(am!le to the !er%asi%e back"round im!ortunin"s of our commercial ci%ili-ation: There is a class of as!irin commercials in $hich

actors !retendin" to be doctors re%eal the com!etin" !roduct to ha%e onl so much of the !ainkillin" in"redient that doctors recommend most ' the don)t tell ou $hat the m sterious in"redient is. Whereas their !roduct has a dramaticall lar"er amount B0.G to G times more !er tabletC. So bu their !roduct. 6ut $h not *ust take t$o of the com!etin" tablets, Er consider the anal"esic that $orks better than the +re"ular-stren"th+ !roduct of the com!etition. Wh not then take the +e(tra-stren"th+ com!etiti%e !roduct, /nd of course the do not tell us of the more than a thousand deaths each ear in the Fnited States from the use of as!irin& or the rou"hl 1AAA annual cases of kidne failure from the use of acetamino!hen& chiefl T lenol. Er $ho cares $hich breakfast cereal has more %itamins $hen $e can take a %itamin !ill $ith breakfast, :ike$ise& $h should it matter $hether an antacid contains calcium if the calcium is for nutrition and irrele%ant for "astritis, Commercial culture is full of similar misdirections and e%asions at the e(!ense of the consumer. Hou)re not su!!osed to ask. Don)t think. 6u . .aid !roduct endorsements& es!eciall b real or !ur!orted e(!erts& constitute a stead rainfall of dece!tion. The betra contem!t for the intelli"ence of their customers. The introduce an insidious corru!tion of !o!ular attitudes about scientific ob*ecti%it . Toda there are e%en commercials in $hich real scientists& some of considerable distinction& shill for cor!orations. The teach that scientists too $ill lie for mone . /s Tom .aine $arned& inurin" us to lies la s the "round$ork for man other e%ils. # ha%e in front of me as # $rite the !ro"ram of one of the annual Whole :ife E(!os& =e$ /"e e(!ositions held in San 9rancisco. T !icall & tens of thousands of !eo!le attend. Hi"hl 5uestionable e(!erts tout hi"hl 5uestionable !roducts. Here are some of the !resentations: +Ho$ Tra!!ed 6lood .roteins .roduce .ain and Sufferin".+ +Cr stals& /re The Talismans or Stones,+ B# ha%e an o!inion m self.C #t continues: +/s a cr stal focuses sound and li"ht $a%es for radio and tele%ision+ ' this is a %a!id misunderstandin" of ho$ radio and tele%ision $ork ' +so ma it am!lif s!iritual %ibrations for the attuned human.+ Er here)s one +7eturn of the 8oddess& a .resentational 7itual.+ /nother: +S nchronicit & the 7eco"nition E(!erience.+ That one is "i%en b +6rother Charles.+ Er& on the ne(t !a"e& +Hou& Saint-8ermain& and Healin" Throu"h the Iiolet 9lame.+ #t "oes on and on& $ith !lent of ads about +o!!ortunities+ ' runnin" the short "amut from the dubious to the s!urious ' that are a%ailable at the Whole :ife E(!o. Distrau"ht cancer %ictims make !il"rima"es to the .hili!!ines& $here +!s chic sur"eons&+ ha%in" !almed bits of chicken li%er or "oat heart& !retend to reach into the !atient)s innards and $ithdra$ the diseased tissue& $hich is then trium!hantl dis!la ed. :eaders of Western democracies re"ularl consult astrolo"ers and m stics before makin" decisions of state. Fnder !ublic !ressure for results& !olice $ith an unsol%ed murder or a missin" bod on their hands consult ES. +e(!erts+ B$ho ne%er "uess better than e(!ected b common sense& but the !olice& the ES.ers sa & kee! callin"C. / clair%o ance "a! $ith ad%ersar nations is announced&

and the Central #ntelli"ence /"enc & under Con"ressional !roddin"& s!ends ta( mone to find out $hether submarines in the ocean de!ths can be located b thinkin" hard at them. / +!s chic+ ' usin" !endulums o%er ma!s and do$sin" rods in air!lanes ' !ur!orts to find ne$ mineral de!osits< an /ustralian minin" com!an !a s him to! dollar u! front& none of it returnable in the e%ent of failure& and a share in the e(!loitation of ores in the e%ent of success. =othin" is disco%ered. Statues of ;esus or murals of Mar are s!otted $ith moisture& and thousands of kind-hearted !eo!le con%ince themsel%es that the ha%e $itnessed a miracle. These are all cases of !ro%ed or !resum!ti%e balone . / dece!tion arises& sometimes innocentl but collaborati%el & sometimes $ith c nical !remeditation. Fsuall the %ictim is cau"ht u! in a !o$erful emotion ' $onder& fear& "reed& "rief. Credulous acce!tance of balone can cost ou mone < that)s $hat .. T. 6arnum meant $hen he said& +There)s a sucker born e%er minute.+ 6ut it can be much more dan"erous than that& and $hen "o%ernments and societies lose the ca!acit for critical thinkin"& the results can be catastro!hic ' ho$e%er s m!athetic $e ma be to those $ho ha%e bou"ht the balone . #n science $e ma start $ith e(!erimental results& data& obser%ations& measurements& +facts.+ We in%ent& if $e can& a rich arra of !ossible e(!lanations and s stematicall confront each e(!lanation $ith the facts. #n the course of their trainin"& scientists are e5ui!!ed $ith a balone detection kit. The kit is brou"ht out as a matter of course $hene%er ne$ ideas are offered for consideration. #f the ne$ idea sur%i%es e(amination b the tools in our kit& $e "rant it $arm& althou"h tentati%e& acce!tance. #f ou)re so inclined& if ou don)t $ant to bu balone e%en $hen it)s reassurin" to do so& there are !recautions that can be taken< there)s a tried-andtrue& consumer-tested method. What's in the kit? Tools for skeptical thinking. What ske!tical thinkin" boils do$n to is the means to construct& and to understand& a reasoned ar"ument and ' es!eciall im!ortant ' to reco"ni-e a fallacious or fraudulent ar"ument. The 5uestion is not $hether $e like the conclusion that emer"es out of a train of reasonin"& but $hether the conclusion follo$s from the !remise or startin" !oint and $hether that !remise is true. /mon" the tools: Wherever possible there m st be in!epen!ent confirmation of the "facts." Encoura"e substanti%e debate on the e%idence b kno$led"eable !ro!onents of all !oints of %ie$. Arg ments from a thority carry little #eight $ "a thorities" have ma!e mistakes in the past. The $ill do so a"ain in the future. .erha!s a better $a to sa it is that in science there

are no authorities< at most& there are e(!erts. Spin more than one hypothesis. #f there)s somethin" to be e(!lained& think of all the different $a s in $hich it could be e(!lained. Then think of tests b $hich ou mi"ht s stematicall dis!ro%e each of the alternati%es. What sur%i%es& the h !othesis that resists dis!roof in this Dar$inian selection amon" +multi!le $orkin" h !otheses&+ has a much better chance of bein" the ri"ht ans$er than if ou had sim!l run $ith the first idea that cau"ht our fanc .J
J =ETE: This is a !roblem that affects *ur trials. 7etros!ecti%e studies sho$ that some *urors make u! their minds %er earl ' !erha!s durin" o!enin" ar"uments ' and then retain the e%idence that seems to su!!ort their initial im!ressions and re*ect the contrar e%idence. The method of alternati%e $orkin" h !otheses is not runnin" in their heads.

Try not to get overly attache! to a hypothesis % st beca se it's yo rs. #t)s onl a $a station in the !ursuit of kno$led"e. /sk ourself $h ou like the idea. Com!are it fairl $ith the alternati%es. See if ou can find reasons for re*ectin" it. #f ou don)t& others $ill. & antify. #f $hate%er it is ou)re e(!lainin" has some measure& some numerical 5uantit attached to it& ou)ll be much better able to discriminate amon" com!etin" h !otheses. What is %a"ue and 5ualitati%e is o!en to man e(!lanations. Ef course there are truths to be sou"ht in the man 5ualitati%e issues $e are obli"ed to confront& but findin" them is more challen"in". 'f there's a chain of arg ment( every link in the chain m st #ork )incl !ing the premise* $ not % st most of them. +ccam's ,a-or. This con%enient rule-of-thumb ur"es us $hen faced $ith t$o h !otheses that e(!lain the data e5uall $ell to choose the sim!ler. Al#ays ask #hether the hypothesis can be( at least in principle( falsifie!. .ro!ositions that are untestable& unfalsifiable are not $orth much. Consider the "rand idea that our Fni%erse and e%er thin" in it is *ust an elementar !article ' an electron& sa ' in a much bi""er Cosmos. 6ut if $e can ne%er ac5uire information from outside our Fni%erse& is not the idea inca!able of dis!roof, Hou must be able to check assertions out. #n%eterate ske!tics must be "i%en the chance to follo$ our reasonin"& to du!licate our e(!eriments and see if the "et the same result. The reliance on carefull desi"ned and controlled e(!eriments is ke & as # tried to stress earlier. We $ill not learn much from mere contem!lation. #t is tem!tin" to rest content $ith the first candidate e(!lanation $e can think of. Ene is much better than none. 6ut $hat ha!!ens if $e can in%ent se%eral, Ho$ do $e decide amon" them, We don)t. We let e(!eriment do it.

9rancis 6acon !ro%ided the classic reason: Arg mentation cannot s ffice for the !iscovery of ne# #ork( since the s btlety of .at re is greater many times than the s btlety of arg ment. Control e/periments are essential. #f& for e(am!le& a ne$ medicine is alle"ed to cure a disease GA !ercent of the time& $e must make sure that a control !o!ulation& takin" a dumm su"ar !ill $hich as far as the sub*ects kno$ mi"ht be the ne$ dru"& does not also e(!erience s!ontaneous remission of the disease GA !ercent of the time. 0ariables m st be separate!. Su!!ose ou)re seasick& and "i%en both an acu!ressure bracelet and 1A milli"rams of mecli-ine. Hou find the un!leasantness %anishes. What did it ' the bracelet or the !ill, Hou can tell onl if ou take the one $ithout the other& ne(t time ou)re seasick. =o$ ima"ine that ou)re not so dedicated to science as to be $illin" to be seasick. Then ou $on)t se!arate the %ariables. Hou)ll take both remedies a"ain. Hou)%e achie%ed the desired !ractical result< further kno$led"e& ou mi"ht sa & is not $orth the discomfort of attainin" it. Eften the e(!eriment must be done +double-blind&+ so that those ho!in" for a certain findin" are not in the !otentiall com!romisin" !osition of e%aluatin" the results. #n testin" a ne$ medicine& for e(am!le& ou mi"ht $ant the !h sicians $ho determine $hich !atients) s m!toms are relie%ed not to kno$ $hich !atients ha%e been "i%en the ne$ dru". The kno$led"e mi"ht influence their decision& e%en if onl unconsciousl . #nstead the list of those $ho e(!erienced remission of s m!toms can be com!ared $ith the list of those $ho "ot the ne$ dru"& each inde!endentl ascertained. Then ou can determine $hat correlation e(ists. Er in conductin" a !olice lineu! or !hoto identification& the officer in char"e should not kno$ $ho the !rime sus!ect is& so as not consciousl or unconsciousl to influence the $itness. #n addition to teachin" us $hat to do $hen e%aluatin" a claim to kno$led"e& an "ood balone detection kit must also teach us $hat not to do. #t hel!s us reco"ni-e the most common and !erilous fallacies of lo"ic and rhetoric. Man "ood e(am!les can be found in reli"ion and !olitics& because their !ractitioners are so often obli"ed to *ustif t$o contradictor !ro!ositions. /mon" these fallacies are: a! hominem ' :atin for +to the man&+ attackin" the ar"uer and not the ar"ument Be.".& The 7e%erend Dr. Smith is a kno$n 6iblical fundamentalist& so her ob*ections to e%olution need not be taken seriousl C< arg ment from a thority Be.".& .resident 7ichard =i(on should be re-elected because he has a secret !lan to end the $ar in Southeast /sia ' but because it $as secret& there $as no $a for the electorate to e%aluate it on its merits< the ar"ument amounted to trustin" him because

he $as .resident: a mistake& as it turned outC< arg ment from a!verse conse1 ences Be.".& / 8od metin" out !unishment and re$ard must e(ist& because if He didn)t& societ $ould be much more la$less and dan"erous ' !erha!s e%en un"o%ernable.J Er: The defendant in a $idel !ublici-ed murder trial must be found "uilt < other$ise& it $ill be an encoura"ement for other men to murder their $i%esC<
J =ETE: / more c nical formulation b the 7oman historian .ol bius: Since the masses of the !eo!le are inconstant& full of unrul desires& !assionate& and reckless of conse5uences& the must be filled $ith fears to kee! them in order. The ancients did $ell& therefore& to in%ent "ods& and the belief in !unishment after death.

appeal to ignorance ' the claim that $hate%er has not been !ro%ed false must be true& and %ice %ersa Be.".& There is no com!ellin" e%idence that F9Es are not %isitin" the Earth< therefore F9Es e(ist ' and there is intelli"ent life else$here in the Fni%erse. Er: There ma be se%ent ka-illion other $orlds& but not one is kno$n to ha%e the moral ad%ancement of the Earth& so $e)re still central to the Fni%erse.C This im!atience $ith ambi"uit can be critici-ed in the !hrase: absence of e%idence is not e%idence of absence. special plea!ing( often to resc e a proposition in !eep rhetorical tro ble Be.".& Ho$ can a merciful 8od condemn future "enerations to torment because& a"ainst orders& one $oman induced one man to eat an a!!le, S!ecial !lead: ou don)t understand the subtle Doctrine of 9ree Will. Er: Ho$ can there be an e5uall "odlike 9ather& Son& and Hol 8host in the same .erson, S!ecial !lead: Hou don)t understand the Di%ine M ster of the Trinit . Er: Ho$ could 8od !ermit the follo$ers of ;udaism& Christianit & and #slam ' each in their o$n $a en*oined to heroic measures of lo%in" kindness and com!assion ' to ha%e !er!etrated so much cruelt for so lon", S!ecial !lead: Hou don)t understand 9ree Will a"ain. /nd an $a & 8od mo%es in m sterious $a s.C begging the 1 estion( also calle! ass ming the ans#er Be.".& We must institute the death !enalt to discoura"e %iolent crime. 6ut does the %iolent crime rate in fact fall $hen the death !enalt is im!osed, Er: The stock market fell esterda because of a technical ad*ustment and !rofit-takin" b in%estors ' but is there an inde!endent e%idence for the causal role of +ad*ustment+ and !rofit-takin"< ha%e $e learned an thin" at all from this !ur!orted e(!lanation,C< observational selection& also called the enumeration of fa%orable circumstances& or as the !hiloso!her 9rancis 6acon described it& countin" the hits and for"ettin" the missesJ Be.".& / state boasts of the .residents it has !roduced& but is silent on its serial killersC<
J =ETE: M fa%orite e(am!le is this stor & told about the #talian !h sicist Enrico 9ermi& ne$l arri%ed on /merican

shores& enlisted in the Manhattan nuclear $ea!ons .ro*ect& and brou"ht face-to-face in the midst of World War ## $ith F.S. fla" officers: So-and-so is a "reat "eneral& he $as told. What is the definition of a "reat "eneral, 9ermi characteristicall asked. # "uess it)s a "eneral $ho)s $on man consecuti%e battles. Ho$ man , /fter some back and forth& the settled on fi%e. What fraction of /merican "enerals are "reat, /fter some more back and forth& the settled on a fe$ !ercent. 6ut ima"ine& 9ermi re*oined& that there is no such thin" as a "reat "eneral& that all armies are e5uall matched& and that $innin" a battle is !urel a matter of chance. Then the chance of $innin" one battle is one out of t$o& or 0KG& t$o battles 0KL& three 0K4& four 0K0M& and fi%e consecuti%e battles 0K@G ' $hich is about @ !ercent. Hou $ould e(!ect a fe$ !ercent of /merican "enerals to $in fi%e consecuti%e battles ' !urel b chance. =o$& has an of them $on ten consecuti%e battles ...,

statistics of small n mbers ' a close relati%e of obser%ational selection Be.".& +The sa 0 out of e%er 1 !eo!le is Chinese. Ho$ is this !ossible, # kno$ hundreds of !eo!le& and none of them is Chinese. mis n!erstan!ing of the nat re of statistics Be.".& .resident D$i"ht Eisenho$er e(!ressin" astonishment and alarm on disco%erin" that full half of all /mericans ha%e belo$ a%era"e intelli"enceC< inconsistency Be.".& .rudentl !lan for the $orst of $hich a !otential militar ad%ersar is ca!able& but thriftil i"nore scientific !ro*ections on en%ironmental dan"ers because the )re not +!ro%ed.+ Er: /ttribute the declinin" life e(!ectanc in the former So%iet Fnion to the failures of communism man ears a"o& but ne%er attribute the hi"h infant mortalit rate in the Fnited States Bno$ hi"hest of the ma*or industrial nationsC to the failures of ca!italism. Er: Consider it reasonable for the Fni%erse to continue to e(ist fore%er into the future& but *ud"e absurd the !ossibilit that it has infinite duration into the !astC< non se1 it r ' :atin for +#t doesn)t follo$+ Be.".& Eur nation $ill !re%ail because 8od is "reat. 6ut nearl e%er nation !retends this to be true< the 8erman formulation $as +8ott mit uns+C. Eften those fallin" into the non se5uitur fallac ha%e sim!l failed to reco"ni-e alternati%e !ossibilities< post hoc( ergo propter hoc ' :atin for +#t ha!!ened after& so it $as caused b + Be.".& ;aime Cardinal Sin& /rchbisho! of Manila: +# kno$ of ... a GM- ear-old $ho looks MA because she takes [contrace!ti%e] !ills.+ Er: 6efore $omen "ot the %ote& there $ere no nuclear $ea!onsC< meaningless 1 estion Be.".& What ha!!ens $hen an irresistible force meets an immo%able ob*ect, 6ut if there is such a thin" as an irresistible force there can be no immo%able ob*ects&

and %ice %ersaC< e/cl !e! mi!!le( or false !ichotomy ' considerin" onl the t$o e(tremes in a continuum of intermediate !ossibilities Be.".& +Sure& take his side< m husband)s !erfect< #)m al$a s $ron".+ Er: +Either ou lo%e our countr or ou hate it.+ Er: +#f ou)re not !art of the solution& ou)re !art of the !roblem+C< short2term vs. long2term ' a subset of the e(cluded middle& but so im!ortant #)%e !ulled it out for s!ecial attention Be.".& We can)t afford !ro"rams to feed malnourished children and educate !re-school kids. We need to ur"entl deal $ith crime on the streets. Er: Wh e(!lore s!ace or !ursue fundamental science $hen $e ha%e so hu"e a bud"et deficit,C< slippery slope( relate! to e/cl !e! mi!!le Be.".& #f $e allo$ abortion in the first $eeks of !re"nanc & it $ill be im!ossible to !re%ent the killin" of a full-term infant. Er& con%ersel : #f the state !rohibits abortion e%en in the ninth month& it $ill soon be tellin" us $hat to do $ith our bodies around the time of conce!tionC< conf sion of correlation an! ca sation Be.".& / sur%e sho$s that more colle"e "raduates are homose(ual than those $ith lesser education< therefore education makes !eo!le "a . Er: /ndean earth5uakes are correlated $ith closest a!!roaches of the !lanet Franus< therefore ' des!ite the absence of an such correlation for the nearer& more massi%e !lanet ;u!iter ' the latter causes the formerJC<
J =ETE: Children $ho $atch %iolent TI !ro"rams tend to be more %iolent $hen the "ro$ u!. 6ut did the TI cause the %iolence& or do %iolent children !referentiall en*o $atchin" %iolent !ro"rams, Ier likel both are true. Commercial defenders of TI %iolence ar"ue that an one can distin"uish bet$een tele%ision and realit . 6ut Saturda mornin" children)s !ro"rams no$ a%era"e G1 acts of %iolence !er hour. /t the %er least this desensiti-es oun" children to a""ression and random cruelt . /nd if im!ressionable adults can ha%e false memories im!lanted in their brains& $hat are $e im!lantin" in our children $hen $e e(!ose them to some 0AA&AAA acts of %iolence before the "raduate from elementar school,

stra# man ' caricaturin" a !osition to make it easier to attack Be.".& Scientists su!!ose that li%in" thin"s sim!l fell to"ether b chance ' a formulation that $illfull i"nores the central Dar$inian insi"ht& that =ature ratchets u! b sa%in" $hat $orks and discardin" $hat doesn)t. Er ' this is also a short-termKlon"-term fallac ' en%ironmentalists care more for snail darters and s!otted o$ls than the do for !eo!leC< s ppresse! evi!ence( or half2tr ths Be.".& /n ama-in"l accurate and $idel 5uoted +!ro!hec + of the assassination attem!t on .resident 7ea"an is sho$n on tele%ision< but ' an im!ortant detail ' $as it recorded before or after the e%ent, Er: These "o%ernment abuses demand re%olution& e%en if ou can)t make an omelette $ithout breakin" some e""s. Hes& but is this likel to be a re%olution in $hich far more !eo!le are killed than under the !re%ious

re"ime, What does the e(!erience of other re%olutions su""est, /re all re%olutions a"ainst o!!ressi%e re"imes desirable and in the interests of the !eo!le,C< #easel #or!s Be.".& The se!aration of !o$ers of the F.S. Constitution s!ecifies that the Fnited States ma not conduct a $ar $ithout a declaration b Con"ress. En the other hand& .residents are "i%en control of forei"n !olic and the conduct of $ars& $hich are !otentiall !o$erful tools for "ettin" themsel%es re-elected. .residents of either !olitical !art ma therefore be tem!ted to arran"e $ars $hile $a%in" the fla" and callin" the $ars somethin" else ' +!olice actions&+ +armed incursions&+ +!rotecti%e reaction strikes&+ +!acification&+ +safe"uardin" /merican interests&+ and a $ide %ariet of +o!erations&+ such as +E!eration ;ust Cause.+ Eu!hemisms for $ar are one of a broad class of rein%entions of lan"ua"e for !olitical !ur!oses. Talle rand said& +/n im!ortant art of !oliticians is to find ne$ names for institutions $hich under old names ha%e become odious to the !ublic+C. ?no$in" the e(istence of such lo"ical and rhetorical fallacies rounds out our toolkit. :ike all tools& the balone detection kit can be misused& a!!lied out of conte(t& or e%en em!lo ed as a rote alternati%e to thinkin". 6ut a!!lied *udiciousl & it can make all the difference in the $orld ' not least in e%aluatin" our o$n ar"uments before $e !resent them to others.

-9ormatK.D9KTorrent b Dodecahedron BGAA2C.

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