Carl Sagan's
Baloney Detection Kit
Based on the book "The Demon Haunted World: Science as a candle in the dark" published by Headline 1996.
The following are suggested as tools for testing arguments and detecting fallacious or fraudulent arguments:
Wherever possible there must be independent confirmation of the facts
Encourage substantive debate on the evidence by knowledgeable proponents of all points of view.
Arguments from authority carry little weight (in science there are no "authorities").
Spin more than one hypothesis - don't simply run with the first idea that caught your fancy.
Try not to get overly attached to a hypothesis just because it's yours.
Quantify, wherever possible.
If there is a chain of argument every link in the chain must work.
"Occam's razor" - if there are two hypothesis that explain the data equally well choose the simpler.
Ask whether the hypothesis can, at least in principle, be falsified (shown to be false by some unambiguous test). In other
words, it is testable? Can others duplicate the experiment and get the same result?
Additional issues are
Conduct control experiments - especially "double blind" experiments where the person taking measurements is not aware
of the test and control subjects.
Check for confounding factors - separate the variables.
Common fallacies of logic and rhetoric
Ad hominem - attacking the arguer and not the argument.
Argument from
"authority".
Argument from adverse consequences
(putting pressure on the decision maker by pointing out dire consequences of an
"unfavourable" decision).
Appeal to ignorance (absence of
evidence is not evidence of absence).
Special pleading (typically
referring to god's will).
Begging the question (assuming an
answer in the way the question is phrased).
Observational selection (counting
the hits and forgetting the misses).
Statistics of small numbers (such
as drawing conclusions from inadequate sample sizes).
Misunderstanding the nature of
statistics (President Eisenhower expressing astonishment and alarm on discovering that
fully half of all Americans have
below average intelligence!)
Inconsistency (e.g. military
expenditures based on worst case scenarios but scientific projections on environmental
dangers
thriftily ignored because they are
not "proved").
Non sequitur - "it does not
follow" - the logic falls down.
Post hoc, ergo propter hoc -
"it happened after so it was caused by" - confusion of cause and effect.
Meaningless question ("what
happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object?).
Excluded middle - considering only
the two extremes in a range of possibilities (making the "other side" look worse
than it
really is).
Short-term v. long-term - a subset
of excluded middle ("why pursue fundamental science when we have so huge a budget
deficit?").
Slippery slope - a subset of
excluded middle - unwarranted extrapolation of the effects (give an inch and they will
take a
mile).
Confusion of correlation and
causation.
Straw man - caricaturing (or
stereotyping) a position to make it easier to attack..
Suppressed evidence or half-truths.
Weasel words - for example, use of
euphemisms for war such as "police action" to get around limitations on
Presidential
powers. "An important art of
politicians is to find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious
to
the public"
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