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What is Fallacy of the Single Cause?

What is fallacy of a single cause?

What is Fallacy of the Single Cause? And the stone-age hunt for scapegoats

Consider the following example:

Chris Matthews is one of MSNBC’s top journalists. In his news show, so-called political experts are wheeled on one after the other and interviewed. I’ve never understood what a political expert is, or why such a career is worthwhile.

In 2003, the U.S. invasion of Iraq was the issue on everybody’s lips. More important than the experts’ answers were Chris Matthews’ questions:

‘What is the motive behind the war?’

‘I wanted to know whether 9/11 is the reason, because a lot of people think it’s payback?’

‘Do you think that the weapons of mass destruction were the reason for this war?’

‘Why do you think we invaded Iraq? The real reason, not the sales pitch?’ 

And so on.

I can’t abide questions like that any more. They are symptomatic of the most common of all mental errors, a mistake for which, strangely enough, there is no everyday term.

For now, the awkward phrase, the fallacy of the single cause, will have to do.

Here’s another example

In 2008, panic reigned in the financial markets. Banks caved in and had to be nursed back to health with tax dollars. Investors, politicians and journalists probed furiously for the root of the crisis: 

Greenspan’s loose monetary policy? 

The stupidity of investors? 

The dubious rating agencies? 

Corrupt auditors? 

Bad risk models? 

Pure greed? 

So… Who do we blame?

Not a single one, and yet every one of these, is the cause.

A balmy Indian summer, a friend’s divorce, the First World War, cancer, a school shooting, the worldwide success of a company, the invention of writing – any clear-thinking person knows that no single factor leads to such events.

Rather, there are hundreds, thousands, an infinite number of factors that add up. Still, we keep trying to pin the blame on just one.

‘When an apple ripens and falls – what makes it fall? Is it that it is attracted to the ground, is it that the stem withers, is it that the sun has dried it up, that is has grown heavier, that the wind shakes it, that the boy standing underneath it wants to eat it? No one thing is the cause.’ 

In this passage from War and Peace, Tolstoy hit the nail on the head.

What can we do about it?

Suppose you are the product manager for a well-known breakfast cereal brand. You have just launched an organic, low-sugar variety. After a month, it’s painfully clear that the new product is a flop.

How do you go about investigating the cause?

First, you know that there will never be one sole factor. Take a sheet of paper and sketch out all the potential reasons. Do the same for the reasons behind these reasons. After a while, you will have a network of possible influencing factors.

Second, highlight those you can change and delete those you cannot (such as ‘human nature’).

Third, conduct empirical tests by varying the highlighted factors in different markets.

This costs time and money, but it’s the only way to escape the swamp of superficial assumptions.

In conclusion: The fallacy of the single cause is as ancient as it is dangerous

We have learned to see people as the ‘masters of their own destinies’. Aristotle proclaimed this 2,500 years ago. Today we know that it is wrong. The notion of free will is up for debate. Our actions are brought about by the interaction of thousands of factors – from genetic predisposition to upbringing, from education to the concentration of hormones between individual brain cells. Still we hold firmly to the old image of self-governance. This is not only wrong but also morally questionable. As long as we believe in singular reasons, we will always be able to trace triumphs or disasters back to individuals and stamp them ‘responsible’. The idiotic hunt for a scapegoat goes hand-in-hand with the exercise of power – a game that people have been playing for thousands of years.

And yet, the fallacy of the single cause is so popular that Tracy Chapman was able to build her worldwide success on it. ‘Give Me One Reason’ is the song that secured her success. But hold on – weren’t there a few others, too?

Next:
Intention-To-Treat Error – SPEED DEMONS MAKE SAFE DRIVERS

Similar Biases:
‘Because’ Justification – ANY LAME EXCUSE
Falsification of History – YOU WERE RIGHT ALL ALONG
Hindsight Bias – WHY YOU SHOULD KEEP A DIARY
Fundamental Attribution Error – NEVER ASK A WRITER IF THE NOVEL IS AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL

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Cherry-picking – DRAWING THE BULL’S-EYE AROUND THE ARROW

The above article is from the book The Art of Thinking Clearly by Rolf Dobelli. The article is only for educational and informative purposes to explain and understand cognitive biases. It is a great book, definitely worth a read!