On the Theoretical Unification and Nature of Fallacies |
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Authors: | Polycarp Ikuenobe |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Philosophy, Kent State University, P.O. Box 5190, 44242-0001 Kent, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | I argue in a non-reductive sense for a plausible epistemic principle, which can (1) theoretically and instrumentally unify or systematize all fallacies, and (2) provide a justification for using such a principle for characterizing an erroneous argument as a fallacy. This plausible epistemic principle involves the idea of an error in the method of justification, which results in a failure to provide relevant evidence to satisfy certain standards of adequate proof. Thus, all fallacies are systematically disguised failures to provide substantive proof: a failure in the attempt to persuade rationally, as opposed to emotionally or rhetorically. I argue that the epistemic idea of begging the question is essential to this idea of a fallacy as an inadequate proof. |
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Keywords: | adequate proof argument begging the question circularity epistemic principle erroneous argument fallacies justification rational persuasion theoretical unification |
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