Appeal to Common Practice
From FreeThoughtPedia
(Difference between revisions)
Latest revision as of 10:04, 2 November 2007
Definition: An action, which has its validity resting on the common practice of its use, is correct.
General Information: The common practice of an action has no bearing on its stance of morality.
Fallacy Structure:
1) Z is a common action
2) Therefor, Z is correct, moral, justified, reasonable, etc.
Example:
Person A: Muhammad was not a child molester because it was common practice to have sexual relations with females at a young age 1400 years ago in the middle-east.
--Raymanbrint 12:11, 16 July 2007 (CDT)
This site costs a lot of money in bandwidth and resources. We are glad to bring it to you free, but would you consider helping support our site by making a donation? Any amount would go a long way towards helping us continue to provide this useful service to the community.
Click on the Paypal button below to donate. Your support is most appreciated! |
---|