I typed this out before but I'll type this out again, really, really slowly, just for you: We are talking about logical fallacies in this thread. It is a logical fallacy to say that X is true because an authority says it's true.Tyrannical wrote:The authority fallacy only occurs when the "expert" has been falsely called an authority.
To adapt the relevant words from the Wikipedia once more: "the conclusion [that X is true because authority Y says it's true] does not follow unconditionally in the sense of being logically necessary."
It is a logical fallacy to say that X is true because an authority says it's true.Tyrannical wrote:Blindly believing a bona fide authority when they are wrong is something else entirely.
The logical fallacy occurs when it is claimed that X is true because an authority says X is true.Tyrannical wrote:The fallacy occurs when the premise "they are an expert" is false.