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Spiritual Fallacy


Spiritual Fallacy




(also known as: spiritual excuse)


Description: Insisting that something meant to be literal is actually “spiritual” as an explanation or justification for something that otherwise would not fit in an explanation.


Logical Form:


X makes no sense; therefore, X was meant in a “spiritual” sense.


Example #1:


Of course, the Koran is not a history or science book, but each and every story in it does contain a spiritual truth.


Explanation: Because we cannot define or prove a “spiritual truth”, anything can be a spiritual truth.


Example #2:


Harold Camping, the preacher who predicted the rapture in 2011, said that the rapture actually did come, but it was a "spiritual" rapture.  Of course, there is no way to demonstrate this.


Explanation: We can’t use “spiritual” as a get-out-of-jail-free card to cover up an apparent contradiction.


Exception: It is not a fallacy when it is specifically referred to as “spiritual”.


“and drank the same spiritual drink; for they drank from the spiritual rock that accompanied them, and that rock was Christ.” (1 Cor 10:4)


Tip: Next time you get pulled over for speeding, tell the cop you were only “spiritually” speeding. See if that works.




References: {apa}This is an original logical fallacy named by the author.{/apa}


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