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CAIRN + KINDLING · CLEAR THINKING ESSENTIALS

Lesson 27: Appeal to Nature

Spot the Faulty Logic

“I only use natural remedies for headaches because natural things are always safer than artificial medicines.”

Discussion: Talk with your teacher about this example. Is everything natural automatically safe?

How/Why It’s Often Used

There’s a romantic idea that nature is pure and good, while human-made things are artificial and potentially harmful. This feeling has some basis - processed foods and synthetic chemicals have sometimes caused problems. But the conclusion that “natural = good” and “unnatural = bad” is far too simple.

This fallacy is extremely common in marketing, especially for food, medicine, and personal care products. “All natural!” is used as a selling point, implying safety and quality without proving it.

Appeal to Nature in Action

Did you spot the faulty logic?

Many natural substances are harmful (poison hemlock, arsenic, etc.), and many synthetic medicines are thoroughly tested and safe. “Natural” doesn’t equal “safe” - each remedy should be evaluated on its actual evidence of safety and effectiveness.

Second Example

“Humans aren’t meant to fly - it’s unnatural. That’s why I’ll never get on an airplane.”

The Flaw

Many things humans do are “unnatural” by some definitions - wearing clothes, cooking food, reading. The naturalness of an activity doesn’t determine whether it’s safe or good. Airplanes are extremely safe due to engineering and testing.