COFFEE.jpg (2219 bytes)

 

 

 

Vacuous Explanation

 
Description:

 

The argument proposes an explanation, but the mechanism proposed does not have a clear meaning, other than merely "whatever explains this phenomenon."
 

 

Comments:

 

Appeals to the "nature" of things, or to hidden forces, such as "divine guidance," "destiny," and "fate" are especially important examples of vacuous explanation.
 

 

Examples:

"This sedative causes sleep because of its dormitive virtue."

"Some species become extinct because they have been around for so long that the species itself becomes elderly. They die of 'species old age'."
 

 

Discussion:

 

The creation of "theoretical constructs" is not necessarily bad reasoning. For example, no one has ever actually seen an electron or a photon. These particles are merely part of a theory aimed at explaining light and other phenomena. However, the theory has been very successful - to the point that most of us now actually believe that these tiny particles of matter actually exist. Perhaps they do. A good theoretical construct helps to guide our thinking about a phenomenon, and leads us to explore the phenomenon more deeply. By contrast, the fallacy of Vacuous Explanation mimics the creation of legitimate theoretical constructs, but it errs in offering a construct that has no meaning other than "that which explains the phenomenon." As such it gives us no genuine guidance.
 

 

Classification: A retroductive Fallacy of Circularity.

 

Source: This fallacy was described but not named by Francis Bacon in Novum Organum, 1620, as the first of his Idols of the Theater.
 

Go to:     WELCOME     EXPLANATION of PRINCIPLES     TABLE of  FALLACIES     EXERCISES     INDEX