phiwum
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2010
- Messages
- 13,590
Not quite, it's pretty much the definition of "logical fallacy".
No, this is just flat wrong.
Remember that article on fallacies? Right at the top of the article was a note that they omitted "formal fallacies", i.e. fallacies in deductive logic.
Appeal to authority and other common fallacies are considered informal fallacies, tied almost exclusively to inductive reasoning. (Nonetheless, they are also called "logical fallacies", as Copi does.)
That's what we have statistics or probabilistic reasoning for. But let's remember that your argument for believing the US government/intelligence isn't based on statistics.
Unless one adopts strict Bayesianism, with the arbitrariness of subjective priors, one cannot calculate the probability that swans are white, given a number of sightings of white swans (with no sightings of non-white).
And, of course, it is foolish to pretend this is how we reason. We see a pattern in nature often enough, we conclude that it probably holds generally and see whether we could find a counterexample.
Again, if that were the case then you have to provide us with estimates of likelihoods. Specifically, let E be "the US government & intelligence services say X is true" and H be "X is true", then you should provide us with P(E | H) and P(E | ~H).
I'll do that just as soon as you provide me with
P(All swans are white | I've seen 275 swans, all white).
True but irrelevant for the reason stated earlier. Even if someone accepts certain claims based on certain authorities doesn't mean someone should accept all claims based on all purported authorities.
Ah, ah! Don't forget what you said: appeal to authority is always fallacious and so should never be done. So, I guess you have no opinion about whether Hannibal existed.
Snip rest, since you're changing the topic. Let's settle our introduction to logical fallacies first.