From an article in the Times Higher Education supplement (19-26 December 2008) on examples of illogical logic -
'It is imperative that we do not do bad things. Eating chocolate, broadly speaking, is a good thing. Therefore not eating chocolate is a bad thing. We should not not eat chocolate. Conclusion; we must eat chocolate.'
I can think of several people who use that 'logic' already.
Another one I like is 'last year, approximately 6000 deaths were direct consequences of drinking. Nearly 5000 deaths were direct consequences of driving. There were 500 reported cases of death by drink-drinking. Therefore drink-driving is safer than drinking or driving alone.'
Hmm.
P.S. Although I use quotation marks, I'm only quoting from memory, so these may not be the exact words used, but as near enough as I can remember.
P.P.S. Yes I'm aware this is a flagrant misuse of quotation marks.
2009年1月7日
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don't you multiply the risks like it's a probability? i think they got their cause-consequence tree the other way round...
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