Apologia

About slippery slopes: A philosopher critiques a sociologist
By Hendrik van der Breggen
March 25, 2020
About slippery slopes: A philosopher critiques a sociologist
Clearly, the causal connections between the events on this alleged slippery slope are dubious. Hiebert is correct that such an argument constitutes a failure to understand cause.
Significantly, however—and Hiebert misses this—not all slippery slope arguments are fallacious merely because they are slippery slope arguments. Consider the following non-fallacious slippery slope argument.
If I build a huge bonfire directly under the low hanging branches of a large dry dead tree in a dry dense forest (during a fire ban), there will probably be a domino effect—the bonfire will cause the low hanging branches to ignite, which will cause the tree to ignite, which will cause other trees to ignite, and so on—so I shouldn’t build the bonfire.
Or consider this: If I slam on the car brakes and come to a sudden and complete stop on Highway 401 near Toronto during rush hour (the 401 has been referred to as “Canada’s busiest highway”), there will probably be a domino effect resulting in perhaps hundreds of collisions—so I shouldn’t slam on the brakes and come to a sudden and complete stop on the 401 during rush hour.
So some slippery slope arguments are fallacious, and some are non-fallacious. Careful thinking is required to discern the difference. A slippery slope argument isn’t fallacious simply because it’s a slippery slope argument, contrary to Dr. Hiebert’s assumption.
Let’s say that (before my retirement) I approach my college president and propose that our school should make a policy of giving philosophy students the right to free tuition if they choose to accept it. My reason: philosophy students are people who must think very hard and aren’t guaranteed jobs after graduation. There would be a slippery slope here, for sure!
Once the rest of the student body heard about this policy, students would appeal to a principle of fairness (and would be motivated by greed perhaps) and would argue that all students should receive free tuition, not just philosophy students. Why? Because allstudents must think very hard and noneare guaranteed jobs.
In other words, if thinking hard and having no guarantee of a job after graduation are accepted as sufficient grounds for a student to receive free tuition, then whether a student is taking anthropology, business, history, philosophy, psychology, sociology—or whatever—doesn’t make a relevant difference. The principle of fairness is fundamental, and the differences between academic disciplines, though real, are incidental. Fairness demands consistency.
Thus, if my college makes a policy (the “legal” bit of the legal-logical slippery slope) that gives philosophy students free tuition on the basis of hard thinking and lack of a job guarantee, then, in the name of fairness and consistency (the logical bit of the legal-logical slippery slope), the college should ensure that all students receive free tuition.
If my boss doesn’t want to be unfair or inconsistent (and doesn’t want our university to go broke), then he shouldn’t give philosophy students the proposed deal.
Our lesson: The above non-fallacious, logical-legal slippery slope argument ensues because the reason behind my proposal justifies much more than intended. Alleged safeguards (e.g., philosophy students only) fail, because they are incidental—out-weighed by the major logical-legal principle that’s been accepted.
- Slippery slope arguments (part 1)
- Slippery slope arguments (part 2)
- Physician-assisted suicide is a slippery slope
- The image of God: Why life is worth defending against physician-assisted suicide
- On putting down pets and people
- Physician-assisted suicide: Look at pros AND cons
- Physician-assisted suicide is a slippery slope
- Are we ignoring a philosophical lesson from history?
- Physician-assisted suicide (interview with Christian Week)
- Doubting euthanasia
- Physician-assisted suicide
- Physician-assisted killing
- Resisting the culture of death
- Ryan T. Anderson, “Always Care, Never Kill: How Physician-Assisted Suicide Endangers the Weak, Corrupts Medicine, Compromises the Family, and Violates Human Dignity and Equality”
- John Keown, “The euthanasia slippery slope is real”
- John Maher, “Why legalizing medically assisted dying for people with mental illness is misguided”
- Margaret A. Somerville, “Killing as Kindness: The Problem of Dealing with Suffering and Death in Secular Society”
- The Euthanasia Deception (53 minute documentary)
- Fatal Flaws: Legalizing Assisted Death (3 minute trailer)