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Appeal to novelty

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"Forget tradition! We're going to work out everything in the world anew!"

The Appeal to Novelty is a logical fallacy in which someone claims that his or her idea or proposal is correct or superior because it is new and modern.

Examples:

"Hovercars are the wave of the future! You should invest all your money in Hovercar stocks." (Hovercars may be futuristic, but that does not necessarily make them a sound financial investment.)

"This computer was made in 2003, therefore it is far superior to that computer made in 2001." (The date a computer was manufactured has nothing to do with how effective it is.)

Appeals to novelty are often successful in a modern world where everyone is eager to be on the "cutting edge" of technology. The so-called "Dot-com bust" of the early 2000s could easily be interpreted as a sign of the dangers of naively embracing new ideas without first viewing them with a critical eye.

The opposite of an appeal to novelty is an appeal to tradition, in which one argues that the "old ways" are always superior to new ideas.

Noone has yet come up with phrase 'appeal to mediocrity' but a lot of people come up with ideas that do this.

See also:



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