Tu quoque

Tu quoque (pronounced like 'too kwoh kway") (Latin for 'you also') is a form of ad hominem fallacy that occurs when it is assumed that an argument is wrong if the source making the claim has itself spoken or acted in a way inconsistent with it. The fallacy focuses on the perceived hypocrisy of the opponent rather than the merits of their argument. This is a fallacy regardless of whether you really did it or not, but it helps if you really didn't do it.

Cogito ergo sum
Logic and rhetoric
Key articles
General logic
Bad logic
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Alternate names

  • Appeal to hypocrisy
  • Ad hominem tu quoque
  • You too!

Structure

The usual structure of the fallacy is:

  1. Person A makes claim X about Person B.
  2. Person B points out that claim X is also true of Person A.
  3. Therefore, X is irrelevant/false and A is a hypocrite.

This kind of reasoning is fallacious because criticism or objection to the person making the claim does not apply equally, if at all, to the argument itself. Certainly, if the premises are indeed true then source A is likely a hypocrite and should also be included in the guilty party, but this bears no relevance or relationship to the validity or factualness of the claim X. In essence, the claim X is being dismissed on grounds of a criticism of A, which is a non sequitur.

Examples

Alice: "Bob is a murderer!"
Bob: "You shouldn't believe her, she's a murderer too!"

The response is only blaming the claimer for the same thing he/she did as well. This doesn't refute the fact Bob is a murderer, but only draws away the attention by involving another person.

In response to criticism

The first common variant of the fallacy is the "you criticize X, but you use something related to X" argument:

Alice: "Smoking and alcoholism are well-known risk factors for cancer."
Bob: "But you yourself smoke and drink a lot! You're wrong!"

The fact that Alice is a smoker and drinker doesn't mean that she is wrong about the effects of those habits. Still confused? A better rebuttal would be to accept the premise that alcohol and smoking really are cancer risks, but then ask why Bob continues to do them. Perhaps Bob knows full well about the dangers of such addictions, but he may or may not be a hedonist with no sense of self-preservation, or it's just because he cannot or is yet to break from his very own addiction, hence why he continues to do it. Or because he is consciously or unconsciously suicidal, which makes his self-harm a logical consequence.

Another example is how (former) drug addicts who have suffered for their drug usage can also be very well qualified in admonishing others to not get started in harmful, expensive, illegal and addictive substances — sometimes due to personal experience and physical proof of the damage incurred by the drug addiction.

In response to support

The second common variant is "you support X, but you do not totally embrace X" argument, which is often doubly wrong:

Alice: "Canada's health care policies are more effective than those of the United States."
Bob: "If you like them so much, why don't you go live there? The fact that you choose to stay here proves that you actually think American healthcare is OK."

This argument fails for two reasons: firstly, whether Alice moves to Canada does not affect the validity of the statement in any way; and secondly it is begging the question: Alice never actually said she liked Canada's health policies, just that they were more effective, and health care policies are not the only factor in choosing one's place of residence. For instance, Alice might be unwilling to leave her family behind regardless of the chance for better health care. Therefore not only is this argument a tu quoque, but also Alice's actions are not even inconsistent with her claims.

This specific claim, in which someone criticising a group is told to leave it if they do not like it, is sometimes called ergo decedoFile:Wikipedia's W.svg and often has jingoist implications.

With the law

A third common variation is "you're against X, but you just did X or had to do X to catch me doing X".

Police officer: "Alice, we found 1.21 terabytes of illegal goat porn on your computer, what do you have to say for yourself?"

Alice: "But officer, you must have looked at the goat porn to know what it was, so you're as guilty as I am!"

There is a very high chance someone who thinks this is a clever retort is either a freeman on the land/sovereign citizen or an extremely stupid anarchist.

This is also a type of false dilemma since it implicitly assumes that all things regarded as crimes must necessarily be prosecuted equally: they are crimes for everyone or no one (this runs into certain problems when trying to define what "false imprisonment" is). The underlying argument is also a rather flawed attempt at an appeal to consequences ("If I'm guilty, so are you, so you should accept that I'm not because it is better for you that way"). Note that pointing to hypocrisy is not always a fallacy if it is used to attack the underlying reasoning of the law rather than simply to evade it: for example, if it is argued that violent movies are censored because people who watch them will become murderers, it is quite valid to ask why none of the censors themselves have become murderers.

Guilt by association

This fallacy is very frequently paired with the association fallacy (a.k.a., guilt by association), so that the person engaging in the fallacy need not even show that the other person's actions are inconsistent with their position; rather, it is merely shown that the actions of some other person somehow associated with that person did something inconsistent with that person's position. For instance, if someone criticizes Bill Clinton for his dishonesty, the common rejoinder is to bring up Bush's dishonesty. A similar case can be found when far-righters bring up Bill Clinton's dishonesty in response to any criticism of their 'God Emperor' Donald Trump. This is whataboutism.

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gollark: ++choose HDD SSD
gollark: ++magic reload_config
gollark: Fascinating.
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See also

ru:Tu quoque

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