argumentum ad Lazarum
English
Etymology
Latin Named after Lazarus, a beggar in the New Testament who receives his reward in the afterlife.
Noun
argumentum ad Lazarum (plural argumenta ad Lazarum)
- (rhetoric, rare) An appeal to poverty; the logical fallacy of thinking a conclusion is correct because the speaker is poor.
- 2013, Richard G. Smith, “The ordinary city trap”, in Environment and Planning A, volume 45, page 2290:
- Indeed, the geographical fact that economic wealth and neoliberal globalization are very geographically concentrated, with just a few cities in advanced economies being the preferred locations for the world’s major stock exchanges, for the headquarters of banks and other producer service firms, cannot be wished away through either an argumentum ad lazarum (appeal to poverty) or appreciation for the diversity of urban cultures (eg, see Myers, 2011).
Antonyms
See also
Argumentum ad lazarum on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.