Bulverism

From RationalWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Cogito ergo sum
Logic and rhetoric
Icon logic.svg
Key articles
General logic
Bad logic

Bulverism is the logical fallacy of assuming without discussion that a person is wrong and/or ill-informed, then distracting their attention from this (which is the only real issue) by explaining how they became so silly, usually associating it to a psychological condition. The fallacy deals with secondary questions about ideas rather than the primary one, thus avoiding the basic question or evading the issues raised by trains of reasoning. It is essentially dodging your opponent's argument by treating them like a psychiatry patient who needs your evaluation to explain why they came up with such a ridiculous argument in the first place.

The fallacy was coined by C.S. Lewis in his essay, First and Second things.

Strict usage[edit]

The form of the Bulverism fallacy can be expressed as follows:

You claim that A is true.
Because of B, you personally desire that A should be true.
Therefore, A is false.

or

You claim that A is false.
Because of B, you personally desire that A should be false.
Therefore, A is true.

Note that B doesn’t even have to be true at all. In fact, it usually isn’t.

Examples[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]