Statement #28 Discussion
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Special Pleading
Category: Fallacies of Relevance (Red Herrings) Special Pleading is a fallacy in which a person applies standards, principles, rules, etc. to others while taking herself (or those she has a special interest in) to be exempt, without providing adequate justification for the exemption. This sort of "reasoning" has the following form:
The Principle of Relevant Difference It should be noted that the Principle of Relevant Difference does allow people to be treated differently. For example, if one employee was a slacker and the other was a very productive worker the boss would be justified in giving only the productive worker a raise. This is because the productivity of each is a relevant difference between them. Since it can be reasonable to treat people differently, there will be cases in which some people will be exempt from the usual standards. For example, if it is Bill's turn to cook dinner and Bill is very ill, it would not be a case of Special Pleading if Bill asked to be excused from making dinner (this, of course, assumes that Bill does not accept a standard that requires people to cook dinner regardless of the circumstances). In this case Bill is offering a good reason as to why he should be exempt and, most importantly, it would be a good reason for anyone who was ill and not just Bill. While determining what counts as a legitimate basis for exemption can be a difficult task, it seems clear that claiming you are exempt because you are you does not provide such a legitimate basis. Thus, unless a clear and relevant justification for exemption can be presented, a person cannot claim to be exempt. There are cases which are similar to instances of Special Pleading in which a person is offering at least some reason why he should be exempt but the reason is not good enough to warrant the exemption. This could be called "Failed Pleading." For example, a professor may claim to be exempt from helping the rest of the faculty move books to the new department office because it would be beneath his dignity. However, this is not a particularly good reason and would hardly justify his exemption. If it turns out that the real "reason" a person is claiming exemption is that they simply take themselves to be exempt, then they would be committing Special Pleading. Such cases will be fairly common. After all, it is fairly rare for adults to simply claim they are exempt without at least some pretense of justifying the exemption. ![]() |
1,485 Total Answer Attempts 23%
343 Correctly Popped Fallacies
1,142 Incorrectly Un/Popped


Most Common Responses102 - Appeal to Fear 65 - Appeal to Tradition 65 - Appeal to Emotion 64 - Appeal to Popularity 62 - Appeal to the Consequences of a Belief 61 - Appeal to Belief 61 - Appeal to Common Practice 42 - Misleading Vividness 40 - Begging the Question 39 - Appeal to Authority 39 - Biased Generalization 35 - Peer Pressure 33 - False Dilemma 31 - Ignoring a Common Cause 30 - Hasty Generalization 28 - Relativist Fallacy 27 - Appeal to Spite 26 - Fallacy of Composition 25 - Appeal to Flattery 25 - Post Hoc 25 - Red Herring 24 - Fallacy of Division 19 - Slippery Slope 18 - Burden of Proof 16 - Genetic Fallacy 15 - Ad Hominem Tu Quoque 14 - Guilt by Association 14 - Appeal to Pity 13 - Circumstantial Ad Hominem 13 - Confusing Cause and Effect 12 - Middle Ground 10 - Poisoning the Well 10 - Appeal to Novelty 10 - Appeal to Ridicule 10 - Ad Hominem 9 - Personal Attack 9 - Gambler's Fallacy 1 - |
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