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Some uses of the argument by lack of imagination are considered fallacious. Irving Copi writes that:
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2 Science 3 References |
In most modern criminal legal systems, it is the responsibility of the prosecution to prove "beyond reasonable doubt" that the defendant is guilty. So in cases where the defendant has been acquitted, it is a logical fallacy to conclude that they were innocent - this would be to assume a proposition simply because it has not been proved false. The assumption of innocence is inspired by consideration for human rights, not by logical necessity.
As another example, suppose someone were to argue:
Unexplained phenomena are often an indication that a particular scientific theory is incomplete, or incorrect. For example, the wave theory of light does not explain the photoelectric effect, though it fits well with the results of the double-slit experiment. However, later theories based around wave-particle duality explain both. It would be a mistake to assert that because a phenomenon is unexplained by current scientific theories, it is unexplainable by science.
Richard Dawkins has attributed an equivalent of the following argument to Bishop Hugh Montefiore, referring to the argument from ignorance as the "argument from personal incredulity".
Law
This would be an argument from lack of imagination, and would be falsified in various circumstances:Science
The first assertion above turns this into an argument from ignorance. In fact polar bears benefit from the fact that their camouflage conceals them from their prey. Protection from predators is only one benefit of camouflage - the argument above fails to acknowledge that there could be other benefits, and hence is fallacious.