Fallacy: Division
The fallacy of Division is committed when a person infers that what
is true of a whole must also be true of its constituents and
justification for that inference is not provided.
There are two main variants of the general fallacy of Division:
The first type of fallacy of Division is committed when 1) a person
reasons that what is true of the whole must also be true of the parts
and 2) the person fails to justify that inference with the required
degree of evidence. More formally, the "reasoning" follows
this sort of pattern:
That this line of reasoning is fallacious is made clear by the following case: 4 is an even number. 1 and 3 are parts of 4. Therefore 1 and 3 are even.
It should be noted that it is not always fallacious to draw a conclusion about the parts of a whole based on the properties of the whole. As long as adequate evidence is provided in the argument, the the reasoning can be acceptable. For example, the human body is made out of matter and it is reasonable to infer from this that the parts that make up the human body are also made out of matter. This is because there is no reason to believe that the body is made up of non-material parts that somehow form matter when they get together.
The second version of the fallacy of division is committed when a person 1) draws a conclusion about the properties of indvidual members of a class or group based on the collective properties of the class or group and 2) there is not enough justification for the conclusion. More formally, the line of "reasoning" is as follows:
That this sort of reasoning is fallacious can be easily shown by the
following: It is true that athletes, taken as a group, are football
players, track runners, swimmers, tennis players, long jumpers, pole
vaulters and such. But it would be fallacious to infer that each
individual athlets is a football player, a track runner, a swimmer, a
tennis player, a swimmer, etc.
It should be noted that it is not always fallacious to draw a
conclusion about an individual based on what is true of the class
he/she/it belongs to. If the inference is backed by evidence, then the
reasoning can be fine. For example, it is not fallacious to infer that
Bill the Siamese cat is a mammal from the fact that all cats are
mammals. In this case, what is true of the class is also true of each
individual member.
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Description of Division
Examples of Division