Word magic
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“”Existence is not a predicate. A hundred thalers that I merely imagine have all the same predicates as a hundred real thalers.
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| —Bertrand Russell[1] |
Word magic is a logical fallacy that occurs when it is assumed that an entity exists, because the word for it exists.
The fallacy is a form of mistaking the map for the territory and an informal fallacy.
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[edit] Explanation
There are words for God, reptoids, the NWO, unicorns, Klingons, faeries, the FSM, UFOs, the Celestial Teapot, and Bigfoot. Are all real?
[edit] See also
- Appeal to consequences
- Essentialism
- Etymological fallacy
- Mistaking the map for the territory
- Wishful thinking
- Word magic is not to be confused with Max Tegmark's ultimate ensemble hypothesis, which holds that anything that can be mathematically defined and is computable, exists. "Word magic" does not require the concept named to be logically consistent, so it is a fallacy.
[edit] External links
- Logical Fallacy of Word Magic, SeekFind.net
- Word Magic, W. WARD FEARNSIDE & WILLIAM B. HOLTHER
- word magic, Philosophy in Action
- Word Magic, Logically Fallacious
[edit] References