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8.7: Slippery Slope Fallacy

  • Page ID
    36202
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    Watch out starting down a slippery slope. You might fall to the bottom and hurt yourself. That’s the idea behind the slippery slope fallacy. Arguments of this form are fallacious if there is no good reason to believe you will fall to the bottom after that first step. For example, someone might argue that you shouldn’t smoke cigarettes because, if you do, then you’ll soon be smoking cigars, and then smoking marijuana, and then cocaine and heroin, and pretty soon you’ll be lying under the bridge unconscious with an infected needle sticking out of your arm. Fallacious reasoning, right? There are perfectly good reasons for not smoking cigarettes, but this isn’t one of them.

    The logical form of a slippery slope fallacy looks like this:

    A leads to B.
    B leads to C.
    C leads to D.
    D leads to...
    ... which leads to HELL.
    We don't want to go to HELL.
    So, we should not take that first step A.

    If A leads to B with a probability of 80 percent, and B leads to C with a probability of 80 percent, and C leads to D with a probability of 80 percent, is it likely that A will eventually lead to D? No, not at all; there is about a 50 percent chance. The proper examination of a slippery slope argument depends on sensitivity to such probabilistic calculations. If the probability of reaching that last step is too low, then that slippery slope argument is an instance of the slippery slope fallacy.


    This page titled 8.7: Slippery Slope Fallacy is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Bradley H. Dowden.

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