Philosophy:Fallacy of the single cause
The fallacy of the single cause, also known as complex cause, causal oversimplification,[1] causal reductionism, and reduction fallacy,[2] is an informal fallacy of questionable cause that occurs when it is assumed that there is a single, simple cause of an outcome when in reality it may have been caused by a number of only jointly sufficient causes.
Fallacy of the single cause can be logically reduced to: "X caused Y; therefore, X was the only cause of Y" (although A,B,C...etc. also contributed to Y.)[2]
Causal oversimplification is a specific kind of false dilemma where conjoint possibilities are ignored. In other words, the possible causes are assumed to be "A xor B xor C" when "A and B and C" or "A and B and not C" (etc.) are not taken into consideration; i.e. the "or" is not exclusive.
See also
- Philosophy:Affirming a disjunct – Formal fallacy
- Philosophy:Essentialism – A view that every entity has identifying attributes
- Fallacy of composition – Fallacy of inferring on the whole from a part
- Philosophy:Formal fallacy, also known as non sequitur (logic)
- Philosophy:Jumping to conclusions – Psychological term
- Philosophy:Overdetermination – When a single effect has multiple sufficient causes
- Philosophy:Proximate and ultimate causation – Event which is closest to, or immediately responsible for causing, some observed result
- Spurious relationship – Apparent, but false, correlation between causally-independent variables
References
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallacy of the single cause.
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