Two things I learned from Chapter 6 are Reasoning In A Chain and The Slippery Slope.
Reasoning in a chain is a chain of conditionals that go step by step. An example of reasoning in a chain is:
If I go to the Britney Spears concert tomorrow, then I won’t be home for dinner.
If I’m not home for dinner, then my mom won’t have to set a plate for me.
If my mom doesn’t have to set a plate for me, then she will have fewer dishes to wash.
So if I go to the Britney Spears concert tomorrow, my mom will have fewer dishes to wash.
It can also be looked at like this:
If A, then B. If B, then C. So if A, then C.
If A is true, we can confidently conclude C. This is a valid form of an argument; there is no possible way for its premises to be true and its conclusion false at the same time.
However, a bad form of the reasoning in a chain argument is the slippery slope. The slippery slope argument is a bad argument that also uses a chain of conditionals, but at least one of which is not true or doubtful. An example of the slippery slope is:
Don’t eat chocolate! If you do, you’ll get addicted. Then you won’t be able to stop buying chocolate. Then you’ll run out of money. Then you’ll become a bum on the streets and be a disappointment to your whole family!
Don’t eat chocolate! If you do, you’ll get addicted. Then you won’t be able to stop buying chocolate. Then you’ll run out of money. Then you’ll become a bum on the streets and be a disappointment to your whole family!
I find that the slippery slope is definitely not a good argument but it is a rather funny one. I hear this type of argument all the time in movies and it is just used to exaggerate someone’s worries or thoughts.
I agree, the slippery slope is definitely heard of very often. It is not a good argument at all and is humorous in the sense that people use the slippery slope in so many different situations.
ReplyDeleteThe way a remember this term is used quiet often- If you sip school you will start doing drugs, drink alcohol and therefore become a failure in life. Which is not always true, however that is the false conclusion that everyone refers to in this situation.
I really liked your examples, and how you show you understood the concept n your own ways. It helped me understand them in a different way.