Political Correctness |
Logical Fallacy of Political Correctness / Political Correctness Fallacy / PC FallacyThe Logical Fallacy of Political Correctness / Political Correctness Fallacy / PC Fallacy occurs when it is assumed that something is true or right because of the political messages (based on nothing absolute) of some people who think that it is true or right. Examples of the Logical Fallacy of Political Correctness / Political Correctness Fallacy / PC Fallacy
Insisting that a person doesn't identify a certain act as a sin has no power to change that act into a non-sin. Homosexuality is a behavior. God calls it a sin. A sin is a step or a slip off of the road that leads to the genuine and absolute fullness of life that is available in Christ Jesus. To say that this action is a sin does not judge any person. Every human being is born a sinner. Jesus offers freedom from sin. Sin leads to death, both physical and spiritual death.
The statement above does not care about truth. It cares about political correctness. We could take the car key example. If you believe that your car key will get you into Heaven, not even having every Christian on Earth endorse your car key religion would help you. It would give you a false sense of security. We could take the cliff example. If you are walking backwards toward a cliff, not even the endorsement of every Christian on Earth will keep you from falling down when you go over the edge. The truth is that Jesus Christ reveals Himself to every person who seeks Him in sincerity. That's why hundreds of thousands of Muslims are turning to Christ without the efforts of missionaries. Whoever seeks Him finds Him. He is the source of all life, wisdom, knowledge, and understanding. ![]()
How can we know anything about anything? That’s the real question |
Other Pages in this sectionAvoiding the Issue Misleading Vividness Dodging the Question Irrelevant Conclusion Irrelevant Question Parade of the Horribles Appeal to Motives Red Herring Answering a Question with a Question Answering a Different Question Non-Support Quibbling Admit a Fault to Cover a Denial Arguing a Minor Point and Ignoring the Main Point Appeal to pity Galileo Wannabe (Pity) Appeal to Novelty Appeal to High Tech Traditional Wisdom The Way We Have Always Done It Appeal to Desperation Straw Man Fallacy Extension In a Certain Respect and Simply Appeal to Extremes Quote Out of Context Misquoting Accent by Emphasis Accent by Abstraction Contextomy Misinterpretation Playing Dumb Arcane Explanation Hyperbole Exaggeration Irrelevant Thesis Burden of Proof Uneven Burden of Proof Burden of Proof Fallacy Fallacy Argument to Moderation Fallacy Abuse Confusing an Explanation with Proof Moralism Ought-Is Is-Ought Naturalistic Fallacy Notable Effort False Compromise Lip Service Tokenism Argument by Denial Diminished Responsibility Contrarian Argument Recently Viewed |