secundum quid
{{Short description|Informal fallacy}}
{{Italic title}}
Secundum quid (also called secundum quid et simpliciter, meaning "[what is true] in a certain respect and [what is true] absolutely")
is a type of informal fallacy that occurs when the arguer fails to recognize the difference between rules of thumb (soft generalizations, heuristics that hold true as a general rule but leave room for exceptions) and categorical propositions, rules that hold true universally.
Since it ignores the limits, or qualifications, of rules of thumb, this fallacy is also named ignoring qualifications or sweeping generalizations. The expression misuse of a principle can be used as well.
Example
{{quote|Let me tell you: all great composers die young. Take Mendelssohn: he was 38. Or Mozart, just 35. And Schubert! Hundreds of songs, and he was only 31.}}
The arguer cites only the cases that support his point, conveniently omitting Bach, Beethoven, Brahms etc
In popular culture
The following quatrain can be attributed to C. H. Talbot:
Dividendo, componendo et secundum quid;
Now secundum quid is a wise remark
And it earned my reputation as a learned clerk.
Types
{{Expand section|date=October 2014}}
Instances of secundum quid are of two kinds:
- Accident — a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid (where an acceptable exception is ignored) [from general to qualified]. This is taking the usual case and inappropriately applying it to special cases.
- Converse accident — a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter (where an acceptable exception is eliminated or simplified) [from qualified to general]. This is taking one unusual case and inappropriately applying it to all cases.
See also
{{Wiktionary}}
References
Further reading
- {{cite encyclopedia |chapter=Fallacies § Secundum quid |encyclopedia=Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy |last=Dowden |first=Bradley |date=2010 |chapter-url=https://www.iep.utm.edu/fallacy/#SecundumQuid }}
- {{cite book| chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LdbxabeToQYC&pg=PA250|year=2008|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-0-470-99721-5|page=250|title=The Blackwell Dictionary of Western Philosophy |chapter=Fallacy of secundum quid |last1=Bunnin|first1=Nicholas|last2=Yu|first2=Jiyuan|author-link2=Jiyuan Yu}}
- {{cite book|last=Coffey|first=Peter|title=The Science of Logic|url=https://archive.org/stream/thescienceoflogi02coffuoft#page/n319/mode/2up|year=1912|publisher=Longmans, Green, and Company|page=309|ol=7104938M}}
- {{cite book|last=Joseph|first=H. W. B.|author-link=H. W. B. Joseph|title=An Introduction to Logic|chapter-url=https://archive.org/stream/introductiontolo00jose#page/589/mode/2up|edition=2nd|year=1916|publisher=Clarendon Press|page=589|OCLC=373124|chapter=The fallacy of Secundum Quid}}
- {{cite book|last1=Parry|first1=William T. |last2=Hacker|first2=Edward A. |title=Aristotelian Logic|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3Sg84H6B-m4C&pg=PA438|year=1991|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0-7914-0690-8|page=438|chapter=A brief history of the fallacies of accident and secundum quid}}
- {{cite journal | last = Walton | first = Douglas |author-link= Douglas Neil Walton | title = Ignoring Qualifications (Secundum Quid) as a Subfallacy of Hasty Generalization | journal = Logique et Analyse | volume = 33 | issue = 129-130 | year = 1990 | pages = 113-154 | url = http://www.dougwalton.ca/papers%20in%20pdf/90quid.pdf |issn = 2295-5836 }}
{{Fallacies}}