The Generalist

Logical Fallacy: Appeal to Science

It often happens in arguments with the general public that people ask for an empirical example of whatever economic (or political) principle I’m attempting to explain.

In truth, it’s sometimes worse. They ask for an empirical example, but really they are appealing to authority under the guise of wanting a concrete!

The problem of course is that economic science is not an inductive science.

People do not know the absurdity of their requests because they have never learned the difference between deductive and inductive reasoning, which, of course, is elementary for critical thinking.*

The word science today is an equivocation. On the one hand it means any discreet field of study and on the other it means specifically a field of study that depends upon the scientific method. In it’s more restrictive sense, the term science  has attached to it a kind of religious reverence, as if all other modes of inquiry are somehow lacking. This is the result of an education that leaves students with bits and pieces of knowledge such that the basis for the validity of science as a pursuit is a complete unknown. It is simply accepted on faith.

So what you essentially get are people who would prefer to prove that the hypotenuse of some triangular objects is often very nearly the sum of the squares of the other two legs by measuring some roughly triangular objects.

Of course that is an extreme case.

But this is why you will sometimes encounter physicists who are attempting to prove the existence (or worse, non-existence) of God via the scientific method.

Wait, what? Yes. You see, the defense of the scientific method as a valid pursuit depends on your acceptance of a certain prerequisite philosophy. That philosophy assumes an external world, a regularity to events, and powers that are clearly greater than Man. The difference between the philosophy upon which empirical science rests and the religious sense of God is in the details, not in existence. So these unwitting physicists are essentially trying to invalidate science via science!

Where this fallacy does the most damage, though, is in the realm of economics. For example, how do you know that monetary inflation will raise prices generally? After all if you measure prices after monetary inflation, it doesn’t always happen. Why not? Well, because there are a host of variables that are impossible to hold constant! But the real question is: why would you want to use such a tentative method when logic does the job? Why would you want to measure the longest side of roughly triangular objects to come up with a tentative theory when your mind can give you a certainty?

Yes, why.

 


For more on the philosophy behind the science of economics, check out Ludwig von Mises’ The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science. (Or read free on mises.org.)

 

 

*Now why would such an elementary piece of reasoning be omitted from public school curriculum? I’ll leave you to answer that.

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3 Comments

  1. Connor

    8 Sep 2025 - 11:09 pm

    Here because I googled “appeal to science fallacy” to see if anyone else had used the phrase and this is the only page that came up. I mean something different by it–scientifically illiterate people who argue for things by citing “studies” and “research”.

    I don’t think you give induction enough credit, but I’m glad to have found your site. Great library.

    Email me some time. We can argue.

  2. Lisa

    10 Sep 2025 - 3:29 pm

    Thanks, Connor! I appreciate the kudos.

    It might not seem like it here, but I do give great importance to the scientific method—it’s just not the appropriate methodology for everything.

    About scientifically illiterate people and “studies” and “research”: I once had an argument on X with a guy who wanted desperately to prove that CO2 is a pollutant of some kind and that we should all be under the thumb of an authoritarian government to save us from it. In response to a rather obvious point about the carbon cycle and photosynthesis, he pulled a line out of a research paper “showing” that plants grown under higher concentrations of CO2 have less protein than plants grown at lower concentrations of CO2. Right then, I knew there was no point in continuing the argument. He had managed to take a clear and basic understanding and utterly confound it with unnecessary and misleading detail that (apparently) supported his bias. Maybe this is the kind of thing you’re referring to?

    I had considered writing an article about this phenomenon. I mean, should I have really gone into detail about how faster-growing plants mean there are more plants at higher concentrations of CO2? Did I really need to make the argument that more food is better than less food? I decided that it didn’t matter what argument I made. This guy was lost to reason; after all, he had a scientific paper behind him. He was “standing on the shoulders of giants.” LMAO. I shouldn’t blame the authors, but in a way, they are at fault, too. Why would someone do a study like this? Precisely because it could be used in this manner in a political discussion, that’s why. It has zero use in agriculture.

    Anyway, I think you can use appeal to science, too, for your meaning. I think it’s a subtype of the appeal to authority, and I imagine it can have numerous shades. Maybe we can settle for type 1 and type 2? 😀

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