Fallacy: Post Hoc
Also Known as: Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc, False Cause, Questionable Cause,
Confusing Coincidental Relationships With Causes
A Post Hoc is a fallacy with the following form:
The Post Hoc fallacy derives its name from the Latin phrase
"Post hoc, ergo propter hoc." This has been traditionally
interpreted as "After this, therefore because of this." This
fallacy is committed when it is concluded that one event causes another
simply because the proposed cause occurred before the proposed effect.
More formally, the fallacy involves concluding that A causes or caused B
because A occurs before B and there is not sufficient evidence to
actually warrant such a claim.
It is evident in many cases that the mere fact that A occurs before B
in no way indicates a causal relationship. For example, suppose Jill,
who is in London, sneezed at the exact same time an earthquake started
in California. It would clearly be irrational to arrest Jill for
starting a natural disaster, since there is no reason to suspect any
causal connection between the two events. While such cases are quite
obvious, the Post Hoc fallacy is fairly common because there are cases
in which there might be some connection between the events. For example,
a person who has her computer crash after she installs a new piece of
software would probably suspect that the software was to blame. If she
simply concluded that the software caused the crash because it was
installed before the crash she would be committing the Post Hoc fallacy.
In such cases the fallacy would be committed because the evidence
provided fails to justify acceptance of the causal claim. It is even
theoretically possible for the fallacy to be committed when A really
does cause B, provided that the "evidence" given consists only
of the claim that A occured before B. The key to the Post Hoc fallacy is
not that there is no causal connection between A and B. It is that
adequate evidence has not been provided for a claim that A causes B.
Thus, Post Hoc resembles a Hasty Generalization in that it involves
making a leap to an unwarranted conclusion. In the case of the Post Hoc
fallacy, that leap is to a causal claim instead of a general
proposition.
Not surprisingly, many superstitions are probably based on Post Hoc
reasoning. For example, suppose a person buys a good luck charm, does
well on his exam, and then concludes that the good luck charm caused him
to do well. This person would have fallen victim to the Post Hoc
fallacy. This is not to say that all "superstitions" have no
basis at all. For example, some "folk cures" have actually
been found to work.
Post Hoc fallacies are typically committed because people are simply
not careful enough when they reason. Leaping to a causal conclusion is
always easier and faster than actually investigating the phenomenon.
However, such leaps tend to land far from the truth of the matter.
Because Post Hoc fallacies are committed by drawing an unjustified
causal conclusion, the key to avoiding them is careful investigation.
While it is true that causes precede effects (outside of Star Trek,
anyways), it is not true that precedence makes something a cause of
something else. Because of this, a causal investigation should begin
with finding what occurs before the effect in question, but it should
not end there.
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Description of Post Hoc
Examples of Post Hoc