Argument from ignorance
Some uses of the argument by lack of imagination are considered fallacious. Irving Copi writes that:
- The argumentum ad ignorantium [fallacy] is committed whenever it is argued that a proposition is true simply on the basis that it has not been proved false, or that it is false because it has not been proved true
- A qualification should be made at this point. In some circumstances it can be safely assumed that if a certain event had occurred, evidence of it could be discovered by qualified investigators. In such circumstances it is perfectly reasonable to take the absence of proof of its occurrence as positive proof of its non-occurrence. (Copi 1953)
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2 Science 3 References |
Law
In most modern criminal legal systems, it is the responsibility of the prosecution to prove "beyond reasonable doubt" that the defendant is guilty. So in cases where the defendant has been acquitted, it is a logical fallacy to conclude that they were innocent - this would be to assume a proposition simply because it has not been proved false. That the law requires a person to be assumed innocent if not proven guilty is inspired by consideration for human rights, not by logical necessity.
As another example, suppose someone was to argue:
- I cannot imagine any ways for artists and inventors to earn a living without intellectual property laws
- Therefore such methods cannot exist
- Therefore intellectual property laws are necessary
- When a work is commissioned for public display (such as an advertisement).
- When gift economies arise.
Science
Unexplained phenomena are often an indication that a particular scientific theory is incomplete, or incorrect. For example, the wave theory of light does not explain the photoelectric effect, though it fits well with the results of the double-slit experiment. However, later theories based around wave-particle duality explain both. It would be a mistake to assert that because a phenomenon is unexplained by current scientific theories, it is unexplainable by science.
Richard Dawkins has attributed an equivalent of the following argument to Bishop Hugh Montefiore, referring to the argument from ignorance as the "argument from personal incredulity".
- The evolutionary purpose served by camouflage is protection from predators.
- Polar bears have no predators.
- Therefore, camouflage serves no evolutionary purpose in polar bears.
- Polar bears have camouflage.
- Therefore, attributes exist in nature which exhibit no evolutionary purpose.
- Therefore, the theory of evolution does not account for observable facts in nature.
References
- Irving Copi, I. M. (1953). Introduction to logic


