APOLOGIA
By Hendrik van der Breggen
October 17, 2019
Jagmeet
Singh, abortion, and illogic
The topic of abortion came up at the Canadian
federal leaders’ debate (October 7, 2019), and logic took a beating.
NDP leader Jagmeet Singh stated the
following: “A man has no place in a discussion around a woman’s right to
choose. Let’s be very clear on that.”
Apparently, Liberal leader Justin Trudeau
and Green leader Elizabeth May agreed with Singh, whereas Conservative leader
Andrew Scheer didn't. Because of the poor format of the debate—and poor
moderation—I didn't get clear on what the other leaders thought.
So let’s (at least) be very clear on Mr.
Singh's claim.
There are two logical problems—serious
logical problems.
Problem 1
Mr. Singh commits the ad hominem fallacy,
the mistake in reasoning which occurs when an arguer is attacked instead of
his/her arguments.
Some instances of the ad hominem fallacy
are easy to spot. Consider the following:
“Einstein is Jewish, therefore his theory
of relativity should be rejected.”
“Your doctor is a woman, therefore don’t
believe what she says about prostate cancer.”
Clearly, in the above arguments the
premise (i.e., the bit before “therefore”) is not relevant to the conclusion
(the bit after “therefore”).
But some instances of the ad hominem
fallacy are not so easy to spot.
Consider (again) Mr. Singh's claim: “A
man has no place in a discussion around a woman’s right to choose [abortion].”
Significantly, Singh is dismissing as
illegitimate all arguments that men might present on the topic of abortion
merely because the arguer is a man. That is, Singh is dismissing a view because
of a characteristic of the arguer (i.e., his sex) rather than via a careful
examination of the arguer’s argument (i.e., its merits or lack thereof).
But this is to attack the messenger
instead of the message, which is a logical sin—the ad
hominem fallacy.
Problem 2
Mr.
Singh’s claim is also self-refuting.
A self-refuting claim
includes itself in its field of reference but fails to satisfy its
own criteria of truthfulness or rational acceptability.
Here is an example: “There are no truths.” Hmmm. If it's true, then
it's not true. It self-refutes.
Another example (spoken by me): “I cannot speak
a word of English.”
Get the picture?
Back to our NDP leader. According to Mr.
Singh, “A man has no place in a discussion around a woman’s right to choose
[abortion].”
Let's think: a MAN is saying that a MAN’s
voice doesn’t count on an issue, i.e., the issue HE is talking about. Well, if
this is true, then Mr. Singh—a man—has no place in this discussion, and so his
claim should be dismissed.
I like Mr. Singh and I intend no
disrespect to him. Nevertheless, I think his claim is deeply problematic from
the perspective of logic—and I hope that my pointing this out will help elevate
the quality of reasoning in the public discussion about abortion.
I hope, too, that pro-life MPs will get
elected.
Hendrik
van der Breggen, PhD, is a retired philosophy professor (Providence University
College) who lives in Steinbach, Manitoba.
For additional thought:
- Untangling popular “pro-choice” claims and arguments concerning abortion
- Aborting Trudeau's (other) abortion argument
1 comment:
It also qualifies as an appeal to authority, since Jag is ruling out everyone except women's perspectives on abortion as valid.
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