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Fallacy: Appeal to Novelty
Also Known as: Appeal to the New, Newer is Better, Novelty.
Appeal to Novelty is a fallacy that occurs when it is assumed that something
is better or correct simply because it is new. This sort of "reasoning" has the
following form:
- X is new.
- Therefore X is correct or better.
This sort of "reasoning" is fallacious because the novelty or newness of
something does not automatically make it correct or better than something older.
This is made quite obvious by the following example: Joe has proposed that 1+1
should now be equal to 3. When asked why people should accept this, he says that
he just came up with the idea. Since it is newer than the idea that 1+1=2, it
must be better.
This sort of "reasoning" is appealing for many reasons. First, "western
culture" includes a very powerful commitment to the notion that new things must
be better than old things. Second, the notion of progress (which seems to have
come, in part, from the notion of evolution) implies that newer things will be
superior to older things. Third, media advertising often sends the message that
newer must be better. Because of these three factors (and others) people often
accept that a new thing (idea, product, concept, etc.) must be better because it
is new. Hence, Novelty is a somewhat common fallacy, especially in advertising.
It should not be assumed that old things must be better than new things (see
the fallacy Appeal to Tradition) anymore than it should be assumed that new
things are better than old things. The age of thing does not, in general, have
any bearing on its quality or correctness (in this context).
Obviously, age does have a bearing in some contexts. For example, if a person
concluded that his day old milk was better than his two-month old milk, he would
not be committing an Appeal to Novelty. This is because, in such cases the
newness of the thing is relevant to its quality. Thus, the fallacy is committed
only when the newness is not, in and of itself, relevant to the claim.
- A made up advertisement.
The Sadisike 900 pump-up glow shoe. It's better because it's new.
- Two business people are having a discussion.
James: "So, what is this new plan?" Biff: "Well, the latest thing in
marketing techniques is the GK method. It is the latest thing out of the think
tank. It is so new that the ink on the reports is still drying." James:
"Well, our old marketing method has been quite effective. I don't like the
idea of jumping to a new method without a good reason." Biff: "Well, we
know that we have to stay on the cutting edge. That means new ideas and new
techniques have to be used. The GK method is new, so it will do better than
that old, dusty method."
- A professor is lecturing to his class.
Prof: "So you can see that a new and better morality is sweeping the
nation. No longer are people with alternative lifestyles ashamed. No longer
are people caught up in the outmoded moralities of the past." Student:
"Well, what about the ideas of the the great thinkers of the past? Don't they
have some valid points?" Prof: "A good question. The answer is that they
had some valid points in their own, barbaric times. But those are old, mouldy
moralities from a time long gone. Now is a time for new moralities. Progress
and all that, you know." Student: "So would you say that the new
moralities are better because they are newer?" Prof: "Exactly. Just as the
dinosaurs died off to make way for new animals, the old ideas have to give way
for the new ones. And just as humans are better than dinosaurs, the new ideas
are better than the old. So newer is literally better." Student: "I see."
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