Tu quoque
Tu quoque(/tjuːˈkwoʊkwiː/;[1]Latinfor 'you also') is a discussion technique that intends to discredit the opponent's argument by attacking the opponent's own personal behavior and actions as being inconsistent with their argument, so that the opponent ishypocritical.Thisspeciousreasoning is a special type ofad hominemattack. TheOxford English Dictionarycites John Cooke's 1614 stage playThe Cittie Gallantas the earliest known use of the term in the English language.[1]
Form and explanation[edit]
The (fallacious)tu quoqueargument follows thetemplate(i.e. pattern):[2]
- Person A claims that statementXis true.
- Person B asserts that A's actions or past claims are inconsistent with the truth of claimX.
- Therefore,Xis false.
As a specific example, consider the following scenario where Person A and Person B just left a store.
- Person A: "You took that item without paying for it. What you did ismorallywrong! "
- Here,Xis the statement: "Stealing from a store is morally wrong." Person A is asserting that statementXis true.
- Person B: "So what? I remember when you once did the same thing. You didn't think it was wrong and neither is this."
- Person B claims that Person A is ahypocritebecause Person A once committed this same action.
- Person B has argued that because Person A is a hypocrite, he does not have a right to pass sentences on others before judging himself.
Other artificial examples[edit]
The example above was worded in a way to make it amenable to the template given above. However, incolloquiallanguage, thetu quoquetechnique more often makes an appearance in more subtle and less explicit ways, such as in the following example in which Person B is driving a car with Person A as a passenger:
- Person A: "Stop running so manystop signs."
- Person B: "You run them all the time!"
Although neither Person A nor Person B explicitly state whatXis, because of the colloquial nature of the conversation, it is nevertheless understood that statementXis something like: "Running stop signs is wrong" or some other statement that is similar in spirit.
Person A and/or Person B are also allowed to be groups of individuals (e.g. organizations, such as corporations, governments, or political parties) rather than individual people.[note 1]For example, Persons A and B might be governments such as those of theUnited Statesand the formerSoviet Union,which is the situation that led to the term "whataboutism"with the"And you are lynching Negroes"argument.
Thetu quoquetechnique can also appear outside of conversations. For example, it is possible for someone who supports a certain Politician B, who recently did something wrong, to justify not changing their support to another politician by reasoning with themselves:
- "Yes, Politician B did do this-or-that immoral thing, but then again so do other politicians. So what's the big deal?"
In this example, Person B was "Politician B" while Person A was "other politicians."
Whataboutismis one particularly well-known modern instance of this technique.
See also[edit]
- Accusation in a mirror
- Clean hands
- False equivalence
- In pari delicto
- List of fallacies
- List of Latin phrases
- Psychological projection
- The pot calling the kettle black
- Two wrongs make a right
- Victor's justice
- People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones
- Matthew 7:5
- And you are lynching Negroes
Notes[edit]
- ^This usage of the word "person" is similar to its usage in law, where the term "person"means"legal person"rather than"natural person"(where the latter refers only to living human beings). Every natural person is a legal person but there are legal persons, such as corporations or political parties, that are not natural persons. An organization might release an official statement that uses thetu quoquefallacy, in which case they would be "Person B" in this article.
References[edit]
- ^ab"tu quoque".Oxford English Dictionary(Online ed.).Oxford University Press.Retrieved2016-04-24.(Subscription orparticipating institution membershiprequired.)
- ^"Fallacy: Ad Hominem Tu Quoque".Nizkor project.Retrieved24 November2015.[dead link]
Further reading[edit]
- Agassi, Joseph (2008). "Rationality and thetu quoqueargument ".Inquiry.16(1–4): 395–406.doi:10.1080/00201747308601691.
- van Eemeren, Frans H.; Houtlosser, Peter (2003)."More about Fallacies as Derailments of Strategic Maneuvering: The Case ofTu Quoque".Ossa Conference Archive.University of Windsor.
- Govier, Trudy (1980)."Worries About Tu Quoque as a Fallacy".Informal Logic.3(3).University of Windsor:2–4.
- Shapiro, Irving David (January 2011)."Fallacies of Logic: Argumentation Cons"(PDF).Etc.64(1): 75–86.JSTOR42578702.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2014-12-08.
- Marcus, Kenneth L. (2012)."Accusation in a Mirror".Loyola University Chicago Law Journal.43(2): 357–93.SSRN2020327.
External links[edit]
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