ChatterBank1 min ago
Logic types
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What's the scientific word for a logical fallacy such as 'God is true because it says so in the Bible'. This is not an excuse to bash Christians for illogical belief systems by the way; there is a proper name for such a question, but the old noggin's gone wonky...
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yes, non sequitur = it does not follow. Just because it says something in the Bible doesn't make it true; that's not a proof.
Alternatively, if you believe everything in the Bible is automatically true because it's God's word, and you believe God is true because it's in the Bible, I think that's circular reasoning. Or begging the question. But I don't know if any of these are accepted terms of rhetoric.
The original "accepted term of rhetoric" for such reasoning was - in Latin - 'petitio principii', as discussed in the link I offered earlier. That has been 'to beg the question' in English for almost half a millemnnium. The fact that modern usage has distorted the phrase out of all recognition does not negate that.