Thinking Skills: Critical Thinking and Problem Solving

(singke) #1

184 Unit 4 Applied critical thinking


Commentary
The response does not sweep away the
objections; and it doesn’t give any good reason
to warrant the author’s assumptions. We’ll
take the second part of the response first. This
is simply that an ex-convict does not need any
talent. But, even if it is true, the fact that
someone needs no talent to become a celebrity
does not mean that he or she has no talent –
say, as comedian, or actor, or poet. This
remains a mere assumption, and one that is
easily contested, for there clearly have been
ex-criminals who have won acclaim for other
achievements besides crime.
The first part of the reply is no better. In fact
it is no more than an insinuation. The author
wants us to believe that the producers and
others are all motivated by profit, and would
therefore say whatever was needed to protect
their ‘cut’. It doesn’t answer the actual claim
that ex-convicts may have talents as well as
notoriety. There is also a fresh assumption
here, namely that the only people who claim
that ex-convicts have talents are producers or
others who have a vested interest. In reality
there may be many people, with no vested
interest, who would also agree with the
counter-argument.

Attacking the person
This line of argument is a very common kind
of fallacy, which needs to be guarded against.
It has its own Latin name, argumentum ad
hominem, meaning an argument directed ‘at
the person’ (literally the man), rather than at
the reasoning. What makes it a fallacy is that
the argument could be perfectly sound and
effective, even if the person who is making it is
supposedly unreliable or wicked or deceitful or
stupid, or has a vested interest, or anything
else that the opponent wants to say to attack
their reputation. If the people who have
succeeded in becoming celebrities do also have
talent, then the counter-argument is a strong
one, whether or not some of the people who
say so have selfish reasons for wanting it to be
true. You cannot make the argument go away

reader has no more reason to accept than to
reject the assumption, it is a potential weakness
in the argument.

Flaw
It could even be said that the need to make this
assumption is a flaw, or reasoning error, if you
consider it to be an unwarranted assumption.
Recall, from Chapter 2.10, that a common flaw
in reasoning is the assumption that because two
things are both true, one is therefore the cause
of the other. Does the author make that mistake
here? Is he saying that because a celebrity was
once a criminal, that must be the cause of their
rise to fame and consequent wealth?
If you think that is what he is saying, then it
would be right to identify this as a flaw in the
argument. If an argument depends on an
unwarranted assumption, then it is fair to say
it is flawed, or that it is unsound, or that there
is a ‘hole in the argument’.
But the author is no fool, and is obviously
aware of the potential weakness in paragraph


  1. That is probably why, in the next paragraph,
    he ‘anticipates’ a counter-argument that
    challenges his assumption(s). The purpose
    behind this is not to admit to a weakness, but
    to block the challenge that threatens to
    expose it. The challenge is that celebrity
    wealth does not come directly from crime, but
    from ‘redirected talent’. The author’s response
    is firstly that the producers and others who
    make this challenge take a cut of the profits
    and therefore ‘would say something like that’;
    and secondly that gangsters need no talent:
    their criminal reputations are enough. And he
    concludes that the income from becoming a
    celebrity is therefore still profit from crime,
    whether it is direct or indirect. It is a strong
    and uncompromising response.


How successful do you think the author’s
reply is in paragraph 3? Does it meet the
objection or not – and why?

Activity

Free download pdf