Argumentum ad martyrdom
Argumentum ad martyrdom is a pseudo-Latin term used for two different logical fallacies favoured by some Christians:
- That a belief becomes true if the person asserting it is hated for it.
- That martyrdom is evidence for the truth of a proposition as martyrs would not die for nothing.
Cogito ergo sum Logic and rhetoric |
Key articles |
General logic |
Bad logic |
v - t - e |
“”But the fact that some geniuses were laughed at does not imply that all who are laughed at are geniuses. They laughed at Columbus, they laughed at Fulton, they laughed at the Wright brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown. |
—Carl Sagan[1] |
Galileo gambit variation
“”Argumentum ad martyrdom — I perceive that they don't like me, therefore I am correct. |
—Tinker Grey[2] |
This version typically stems from a belief that the message being conveyed is one that makes people hostile because of its truth. This usage was originally coined by "Tinker Grey", a secular member of Christian Forums[3] who saw that refuting an argument of a member who was under the impression that other members hated them resulted in a bolstering of their confidence in their refuted argument.
The argument is reportedly popular with Christians as the Bible says to expect persecution for your beliefs, and that persecution indicates you are right (e.g., Matthew 5:11-12):
(And lots more.[4])
Personal certainty
This usage is the argument that Christianity (or, for that matter Islam[5] or whatever) is true because people would not martyr themselves for it if it were false, sometimes presented in the rhymed statement that martyrs wouldn't "die for a lie". Thus, the martyrs' assumed personal certainty is being advanced as evidence for a proposition.
This usage precedes the "Galileo gambit" usage[note 1] and in Christianity it goes back to the 2nd/3rd century Church father Tertullian
Argument from personal certainty is trivially false: throughout history, many people have died in the service of provable lies. More generally, if you consider the number of people who died for mutually contradictory ideas (e.g. from different religions or over doctrinal disputes), it is likely that most people who died for an idea were actually wrong. As this is a common argument, detailed refutations have been compiled.[9]
See also
- Arthur C. Clarke's First Law
- Big science
- Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed
- Confirmation bias
- Galileo gambit
- Hostile media effect
- Paranoia
- Persecution complex
- Science was wrong before
Notes
- "And, once again, we find a Biblical prophesy fullfilled in our lifetime — the Bible clearly predicts that the day will come when those who profess a belief in Jesus Christ will be persecuted and ridiculed." by SensibleSam[6]
References
- http://www.srmhp.org/archives/quotes-pseudoscience.html
- Argumentum ad martyrdom — I perceive that they don't like me, therefore I am correct. by Tinker Grey (24th November 2009, 01:25 PM) Christian Forums (archived from April 14, 2015).
- Christian Forums
- All That Will Live Godly in Christ Jesus Shall Suffer Persecution Topical Bible Studies (archived from May 23, 2019).
- Dying for God: Martyrdom in the Shii and Babi Religions by Jonah Winters (1997) Master of Arts thesis, University of Toronto via Bahá'í Library (archived from May 22, 2019).
- Re: Article Discussion: Theater protest set by activists for gay by jimhinco (December 11th, 2008, 5:13 pm) #598987 Denver Post (archived from (April 14, 2015).
- Tertullian, Apologeticus, ch. 50.
- Rediscovering the Martyrology by George Weigel (2.26.14) First Things.
- Would someone die for what they knew was a lie? Religions Wiki.