Fallacy: Relativist Fallacy
Also Known as: The Subjectivist Fallacy.
The Relativist Fallacy is committed when a person rejects a claim by
asserting that the claim might be true for others but is not for
him/her. This sort of "reasoning" has the following form:
In this context, relativism is the view that truth is relative to Z
(a person, time, culture, place, etc.). This is not the view that claims
will be true at different times or of different people, but the view
that a claim could be true for one person and false for another at the
same time.
In many cases, when people say "that X is true for me" what
they really mean is "I believe X" or "X is true about
me." It is important to be quite clear about the distinction
between being true about a person and being true for a person. A claim
is true about a person if the claim is a statement that describes the
person correctly. For example, "Bill has blue eyes" is true of
Bill if Bill has blue eyes. To make a claim such as "X is true for
Bill" is to say that the claim is true for Bill and that it need
not be true for others. For example: "1+1=23 is true for Bill"
would mean that, for Bill, 1+1 actually does equal 23, not that he
merely believes that 1+1=23 (that would be "It is true of Bill that
he believes 1+1=23"). Another example would be "The claim that
the earth is flat is true for Bill" would mean that the earth
really is flat for Bill (in other words, Bill would be in a different
world than the rest of the human race). Since these situations (1+1
being 23 and the earth being flat for Bill) are extremely strange, it
certainly seems that truth is not relative to individuals (although
beliefs are).
As long as truth is objective (that is, not relative to individuals),
then the Relativist Fallacy is a fallacy. If there are cases in which
truth is actually relative, then such reasoning need not be fallacious.
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Description of Relativist Fallacy
Examples of Relativist Fallacy
Bill: "That may be true for you, but it is not true for me."
Bill: "That may be true for you, but it is not true for me."
Dave: "Contradictions may be bad on your Eurocentric, oppressive, logical world view, but I don't think they are bad. Therefore my position is just fine."