Difference between revisions of "Appeal to nature"

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==Overview==
 
==Overview==
[[Category:Logical Fallacies]]{{seed}}
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[[Category:logical fallacies]]An [[appeal to nature]] is a claim that something is [[good]] or right because it is "natural", or that something is [[bad]] or wrong because it is unnatural.
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This equation is generally regarded as a fallacy for the following reasons:
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* [[Civilization]] is inherently "unnatural", and any argument not [[argument from force|based solely on force]] depends on the existence of civilized discourse, itself based on the principles of rational thought and analysis. When these are suspended or removed, society reverts to [[feudalism]] and only stops there due to the innate cleverness of human beings at manipulating each other with threats.
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* The large number of obvious counterexamples. You wouldn't, say, defend a shark's right to attack swimmers (much less a vicious dog's right to maim children) just because that was its natural tendency, or make laws requiring that people behave more like chimpanzees.
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===Validity===
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As with many fallacies, there is a grain of validity to it – in this case, the fact that if something is done in nature, it may be somehow vital to survival, otherwise known as the [[argument from survival]].
 
==Reference==
 
==Reference==
 
* {{wikipedia|Appeal to nature}}
 
* {{wikipedia|Appeal to nature}}

Revision as of 14:58, 4 February 2007

Overview

An appeal to nature is a claim that something is good or right because it is "natural", or that something is bad or wrong because it is unnatural.

This equation is generally regarded as a fallacy for the following reasons:

  • Civilization is inherently "unnatural", and any argument not based solely on force depends on the existence of civilized discourse, itself based on the principles of rational thought and analysis. When these are suspended or removed, society reverts to feudalism and only stops there due to the innate cleverness of human beings at manipulating each other with threats.
  • The large number of obvious counterexamples. You wouldn't, say, defend a shark's right to attack swimmers (much less a vicious dog's right to maim children) just because that was its natural tendency, or make laws requiring that people behave more like chimpanzees.

Validity

As with many fallacies, there is a grain of validity to it – in this case, the fact that if something is done in nature, it may be somehow vital to survival, otherwise known as the argument from survival.

Reference