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proving too much : ウィキペディア英語版
proving too much
Proving too much, in philosophy, is a logical fallacy which occurs when an argument reaches the desired conclusion in such a way as to make that conclusion only a special case or corollary consequences of a larger, obviously absurd conclusion. It is a fallacy because, if the reasoning were valid, it would hold for the absurd conclusion—the judgement of fallacy is therefore largely dependent on a normative judgement of the "absurd" conclusion. A charge of "proving too much" is thus generally invoked, rightly or wrongly, against normatively-opposed conclusions, and so are often controversial at the time they are made, as in the following examples pertaining to laissez-faire economics and slavery:
* The Georgia-born American educator Henry Coppée in 1850 described in his "Elements of rhetoric" the argument that "slavery is evil because a master beats a slave to death" as proving too much; this would mean that because domestic violence against spouses and children exists, marriage or parenthood would be evil.
* Economist Walter Block states that the argument that—because perfect competition does not exist in a free market—government must intervene, proves too much: "It argues, in effect, that 1) reality does not resemble an arbitrarily contrived model of the world; 2) reality should resemble this model; and therefore 3) the government should step in, to bring the world into closer conformity with the model. But almost anything can be 'proven' with this line of reasoning. Substitute for perfect competition objects moving faster than the speed of light, or people having more than two arms and further government intervention can easily be justified. Even were it true, however, that the market is somehow deficient because the pinnacle of perfect competition has not been attained, it by no means follows that further state encroachments on the economy would improve matters."
* Adam Serwer writing in the Washington Post describes supporters of California's Proposition 8 as proving too much, explicitly using the formulation "This argument is too clever by half." "Prop 8" bans same-sex marriage in California, but was struck down by Judge Vaughn Walker; supporters of Prop 8 have filed an appeal claiming that he should have recused himself as he is in a long term same-sex partnership. Serwer notes that the same logic (that is, that legalizing same-sex marriage benefits gay couples and harms straight ones) applies equally well to a straight couple, eliminating virtually the entire judiciary.
Showing that an opponent has proved too much is a form of ''reductio ad absurdum.''
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「proving too much」の詳細全文を読む



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