Is this a logical fallacy?
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Is this a logical fallacy?
It really seems like it should be one, but I can't seem to find it anywhere.
Basically, the argument goes like this:
Person A: "Acheiving equality for women under the US system is important."
Person B: "But what about countries where the gender-based inequality is even greater? Why bother trying to fix the US when Iran is so much worse?"
or
Person A: "We need to reduce the amount of people who are starving in the United States."
Person B: "But what about countries where there are far more starving people? Why bother trying to fix the US when africa is so much worse?"
Is it a logical fallacy? If so, what name does it go by?
Basically, the argument goes like this:
Person A: "Acheiving equality for women under the US system is important."
Person B: "But what about countries where the gender-based inequality is even greater? Why bother trying to fix the US when Iran is so much worse?"
or
Person A: "We need to reduce the amount of people who are starving in the United States."
Person B: "But what about countries where there are far more starving people? Why bother trying to fix the US when africa is so much worse?"
Is it a logical fallacy? If so, what name does it go by?
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Depending on how you look at it, it could either be
a) red herring (since how other countries perform in a certain area is irrelevant to how the US performs in that same area)
b) false dilemna - where he artificially restricts the choices to a) total equality (in the whole world) or b) the status quo.
His argument goes along the lines of since a) is unreachable lets stick with b). Unfortunately they forget option c) where you improve equality for women but you may not get 100% in the whole world.
a) red herring (since how other countries perform in a certain area is irrelevant to how the US performs in that same area)
b) false dilemna - where he artificially restricts the choices to a) total equality (in the whole world) or b) the status quo.
His argument goes along the lines of since a) is unreachable lets stick with b). Unfortunately they forget option c) where you improve equality for women but you may not get 100% in the whole world.
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Not exactly. This would be a tu quoque:Szass Tam wrote:That's called a tu quoque, or "you, also," fallacy.
In the examples given, the fallacy is more along the lines of a red herring, because the rebuttal is couched in general terms rather than aiming at the speaker. The fact that there is child poverty elsewhere in the world has no bearing on the question of whether America should do something about its own problems.America needs to do something about child poverty in its inner cities.
What country are you from? Britain? You have child poverty too, so shut up.
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"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
I don't recall a specific name for that fallacy, but the logic is essentially "Y is worse than X, so X is okay." You can see the flaw much more clearly when Y is "serial murderes" and X is "child abusers".
Of course, that's not exactly what the argument in the OP is. It's more for some sort of international triage than anything else; so it fails because international help on that sort of scale is practically impossible.
Of course, that's not exactly what the argument in the OP is. It's more for some sort of international triage than anything else; so it fails because international help on that sort of scale is practically impossible.
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It's not necessarily regarding other countries - it is that, "Y is worse than X, so we shouldn't bother trying to fix X". The fact that my two examples both involved international triage is an unfortunate result of my lackluster imagination of unique uses for the basic idea.Surlethe wrote:I don't recall a specific name for that fallacy, but the logic is essentially "Y is worse than X, so X is okay." You can see the flaw much more clearly when Y is "serial murderes" and X is "child abusers".
Of course, that's not exactly what the argument in the OP is. It's more for some sort of international triage than anything else; so it fails because international help on that sort of scale is practically impossible.
Another example would be that we shouldn't bother trying to fix the problem of child abuse, because gangs cause so much more pain and suffering.
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No, the "innocent by association" fallacy is where you try and say something isn't bad because some otherwise good person engages in it.Masami von Weizegger wrote:I'm no expert on fallacies and there's probably already a well-recognised term for this, but it seems to me to be the opposite of the old "guilt by association" fallacy. In other words, "innocent by association".
And unless someone can point to an earlier usage of the term, it was coined by your's truly
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