Argumentum ad lazarum or appeal to poverty is the informal fallacy of thinking that is right just because the person who said it is poor, or that the conclusion is wrong because the person who said it is rich. It is named after Lazarus, a beggar in a New Testament parable who gets rewarded in the afterlife.
This is often phrased as the statement, "poor, but honest."
The opposite is the argumentum ad crumenam.
Examples
- Family-run farms are struggling to get by, so when they say that we need to help them, they must be on to something.
- Homeless people say that it's hard to find places to live. Therefore it must be.
- The monks have given up all material possessions. They must be enlightened.
- All you need to know about the civil war in that country is that the rebels live in mud huts, while the general who sends troops against them sits in a fancy, air-conditioned office.
References
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| Informal | | Equivocation | |
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| Question-begging | |
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| Correlative-based | |
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| Illicit transference | |
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| Secundum quid |
- Accident
- Converse accident
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| Faulty generalization |
- Sampling bias
- Argument from analogy
- Anecdotal evidence
- Base rate / Conjunction
- Double counting
- Slothful induction
- Overwhelming exception
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| Ambiguity | |
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| Questionable cause | |
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| Appeals |
- Law/Legality
- Stone / Proof by assertion
| Consequences | |
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| Emotion |
- Children
- Fear
- Flattery
- Novelty
- Pity
- Ridicule
- In-group favoritism
- Invented here / Not invented here
- Island mentality
- Loyalty
- Parade of horribles
- Spite
- Stirring symbols
- Wisdom of repugnance
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| Genetic fallacy | |
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Other fallacies of relevance | |
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| Formal | | In propositional logic |
Affirming a disjunct
Affirming the consequent
Denying the antecedent
Argument from fallacy
Masked man
Mathematical fallacy
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| In quantificational logic |
- Existential
- Illicit conversion
- Proof by example
- Quantifier shift
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| Syllogistic fallacy |
- Affirmative conclusion from a negative premise
- Negative conclusion from affirmative premises
- Exclusive premises
- Existential
- Necessity
- Four terms
- Illicit major
- Illicit minor
- Undistributed middle
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