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Argumentum ad lazarum
Informal fallacy linking wisdom to poverty From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Argumentum ad lazarum or appeal to poverty is the informal fallacy of thinking a conclusion is correct solely because the speaker is poor, or it is incorrect because the speaker is rich. It is named after Lazarus, a beggar in a New Testament parable who receives his reward in the afterlife.
![]() | This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (October 2017) |
This is popularly summarized as the statement, "Poor, but honest."
The opposite is the argumentum ad crumenam.
Some experimental evidence supports the appeal to poverty. A 2017 study by Igor Grossmann and Justin Brienza at the University of Waterloo in Canada found that when "wisdom" is defined as the ability to consider opposing perspectives and find a compromise that defuses an interpersonal dispute, poor and working-class people are more likely to show such an ability than are those in higher socioeconomic classes.[1][2] As with all fallacies though, the tendency is not absolute.
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Examples
- "Family farms are struggling to get by so when they say we need to protect them, they must be on to something."
- "The homeless tell us it's hard to find housing. Thus it must be."
- "The monks have forsworn all material possessions. They must have achieved enlightenment."
- "All you need to know about the civil war in that country is that the rebels live in mud huts, while the general who sends troops against them sits in a luxurious, air-conditioned office."
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References
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