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Description: |
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The argument attempts to persuade by invoking feelings of
good humor and laughter. To laugh with someone seems to imply
agreement with his position. Often the argument takes the form of a cleverly
worded or humorous slogan. |
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Comments: |
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Calling a position "absurd" or "laughable" without actually
telling a joke should probably be considered an Ad Hominem - Abusive rather
than an Appeal to Humor. Sometimes a good comedian can make us laugh merely
by saying that something is funny, but generally this is more abusive than
humorous. Be careful not to confuse Appeal to Humor with other fallacies
(notably Amphiboly) that tend to be funny. The fallacy of Appeal to Humor
uses humor to persuade. The speaker is aware of the joke. Some other
fallacies are funny because we see through them. In those cases, the speaker
is not aware that he is the butt of a joke. |
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Examples: |
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"I notice that everyone in favor of abortion has already
been born." |
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--Ronald Reagan |
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"Keep Bush, Cheney, Ashcroft and Rumsfeld in office!
After all, why change horsemen in mid-apocalypse?" |
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Discussion: |
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Any stand-up comic will tell you that the secret to humor
is: tell the truth. A good comic tells us things about ourselves that
we normally wouldn't want to hear since they are too embarrassing or
sensitive. But by getting us to laugh at the truth about ourselves, we learn
to recognize our own foibles, and we learn to forgive the foibles of others.
Humor is the ultimate defense mechanism. We laugh at human foibles because
this allows us to live with them. Laughter is a natural and healthy way to
respond when we recognize that someone has offered us a bravely-spoken, but
possibly uncomfortable, truth.
Of course we laugh for other reasons as well.
The fallacy of Appeal to Humor exploits our natural response to
bravely-spoken truth. The fallacy presumes that any view that can be
expressed in a way that elicits laughter must be true. However, we actually
laugh for many reasons, only one of which is the recognition of the truth of
the sentiment expressed. We may also laugh at a slogan because it is
cleverly worded. We may laugh only because everyone around us is laughing.
We laugh at slap-stick humor. An argument mimics our response to
bravely-spoken truth when it gets us to laugh for a reason that is unrelated
to our recognition of truth, yet seems to imply that laughter entails
assent. |
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Classification: A Fallacy of
Irrelevance (a deductive fallacy of soundness with a falsehood in the
major premiss) in the Emotional Appeals family. |
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Source: Richard Whateley describes
this fallacy, but does not name it, in Elements of Logic, 1826. The
term "appeal to humor" appears some time in the 20th century. I
first became aware of it from Gerald Runkle, Good Thinking: An
Introduction to Logic (1978). Please
contact me
if you can point me to a potentially useful clue regarding the original
source of this fallacy. |
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