Argument_from_anecdote

Argument from anecdote

Argument from anecdote

Informal logical fallacy


An argument from anecdote is an informal logical fallacy, where anecdotal evidence is presented as an argument; without any other contributory evidence or reasoning. This type of argument is considered as an informal logical fallacy as it is unpersuasive – since the anecdote could be made up, misconstrued or be a statistical outlier which is insignificant when further evidence is considered. This fallacy can often be found in conjunction with the hasty generalisation fallacy – where the hasty generalisation is made from unsubstantiated anecdotes.

Examples

"I won’t accept any argument from anecdote. (“My cousin has a friend who went to a medium and talked to her dead husband.")

Isaac Asimov, used the phrase in 1977 when discussing life after death.[1]

"God visited me in a dream today and for something to visit me, it must exist – therefore God exists."

Whilst this argument is logically valid – as, if the premise is true, the conclusion must also be true; it may not be logically sound. The premise (which is purely anecdotal) could have been made up to support this person's argument, or the god seen in the dream could have simply been part of the dream. The validity of the premise cannot be deduced, as it is anecdotal.

"I know of someone who died after smoking marijuana, therefore smoking marijuana is very dangerous and should not be legal."

This is an example of the hasty generalisation fallacy working with an argument from anecdote. This argument is poor as: a) It is difficult to deduce the truthfulness or validity of the premise b) even if someone did die after smoking marijuana, one isolated case does not mean that it is as dangerous as the argument claims, without further evidence this is a hasty generalisation and c) this claim uses the post hoc fallacy; just because someone died after smoking marijuana, that does not mean that the marijuana caused the death.


References

  1. Asimov, Isaac (February 1977). Ferman, Edward L. (ed.). "SCIENCE: Asimov's Corollary". The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. Mercury Press. p. 105.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Argument_from_anecdote, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.