Freakonomics Radio - 545. Enough with the Slippery Slopes!
Episode Date: June 8, 2023Gun control, abortion rights, drug legalization — it seems like every argument these days claims that if X happens, then Y will follow, and we’ll all be doomed to Z. Is the slippery-slope argument... a valid logical construction or just a game of feelingsball?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
My name is Ben Gold. I am a criminal defense attorney and my practice is in military law.
Gold served as a surface warfare officer in the Navy, and after tours in the Persian Gulf
and Hawaii, he decided to go to law school. He wanted to keep working with the military,
but he didn't want to be a lawyer for the military.
I had seen some serious flaws in the military justice system,
and I wasn't quite sure I wanted to be fully a part of it.
During law school, Gold learned to analyze legal arguments,
and there was one type of argument that he kept coming across.
I think I heard a clip in some podcast or something of a politician who had said,
you know, allowing for universal background checks.
It's a slippery slope from there because what prevents the government from then instituting entirely new and different surveillance programs?
Ah, yes. The slippery slope argument.
I thought to myself, well, there's a lot of things that would prevent that from happening.
For instance, a new law would have to be made. There'd be legislation. There would be a new Supreme Court ruling.
That said, the slippery slope argument is pretty much everywhere these days,
at least in the media and in politics. If we make the ARs, you have to register them,
or they're banned. Then the next step is a handgun. That's the slippery slope.
If we're just willing to cancel student loan debt, why can't we just cancel credit card debt,
mortgage payments? Again, it just leads to this slippery slope.
If we can't reach a point of integrity, honesty, and decency,
we just slide down a slippery slope to chaos and fascism.
Have you ever wondered how the slope became so slippery?
Ben Gold has.
Is it a visual thing?
Is it like the idea of going down a slope that's slippery?
Does that register with people?
Why does it register?
I don't know why this particular thing caught my attention, but it did.
And so I bring it to you.
That's right.
Gold sent us an email asking for an exploration of the slippery slope argument.
We liked that idea.
So here we are. Today on Freakonomics Radio, we have rounded up a philosopher, some legal scholars, and
an anti-smoking activist to try to understand how the slope got so slippery, how much of
the slippage is hyperbole, and why this is worth worrying about.
One of the things that worries me about journalism as we are practicing it now
is the monetization of scaring people, right? If you scare people's face off, they will click.
We'll do our best to not scare your face off, but there's no guarantee because once we get started,
well, you know. it's a slippery slope.
I think that is a slippery slope.
It's a slippery slope.
This is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything, with your host, Stephen Dubner.
Let's start by defining terms.
A slippage-slope argument is a forward-looking causal argument.
It has various stages, a causal chain.
You know, this will lead to that,
and that will lead to something else.
And the terminal point of that slope
is some undesirable consequence.
That is Chris Tyndale,
a professor of philosophy
at the University of Windsor in Ontario, Canada.
I teach principally argumentation studies.
And argumentation studies is what?
We're interested in the nature of argument, the study of argument,
and the ways in which people argue tells us a lot about their values,
a lot about the assumptions they're making about the world.
And how long has the slippery slope argument been around?
Oh, the origin is somewhere in the last century.
One theory is that the phrase was popularized by the temperance movement, Oh, the origin is somewhere in the last century. called The Devil's Toboggan Slide shows saloons and popular hotels at the top of the slide and at the bottom, corruption and drunkards' graves. Slippery slope is hardly the only phrase we use
that connotes this sort of progression. We've also got the domino effect, the thin end of the wedge,
and everyone's favorite, letting the camel's nose inside the tent. But slippery slope is the most common,
especially in public policy. We've seen it in legalization around drugs, legalization around
medical-assisted dying. We see it in gun control. It's usually phrased in terms of freedoms.
You take away some freedoms, it's going to lead to the erosion of freedoms and ultimately
the imposition of government control over all areas of life, which is obviously undesirable.
Okay, let's look at how a slippery slope argument figured into one big change in public policy.
We need to go back some 70 years.
This is Matt Myers. In the 1950s and 1960s, over 45% of Americans smoked.
Smoking plastered our TVs.
The Marlboro Cowboy was the image of coolness.
The Virginia Slims woman was the role model for young girls.
And you literally couldn't go anywhere without being bombarded by cigarette smoke, whether it was
on an airplane, a train, a bus, a restaurant, and frankly, in most of our homes.
You may have guessed by Myers' use of the word bombarded that he is devoutly anti-cigarette.
I'm the president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.
I've been involved in this issue now for over 40 years.
For a long time, smoking wasn't considered dangerous. Some promoters even claimed it
had health benefits. But in 1964, the U.S. Surgeon General published a landmark report
that laid out the dangers. It took a while for regulation to catch up.
Smoking was allowed virtually everywhere, including on trains,
buses, and airplanes through the 1980s. In 1987, Congress passed a law that banned smoking on all
flights under 90 minutes. Why only short flights? Because the tobacco industry claimed that it would
cause mass chaos and that what we would see were
literally riots on airplanes. They said you might well even see somebody come out an airplane with
a gun who were so addicted that they would lose control and also created a picture of addicted
pilots who would be unable to function. The initial law banning smoking on short flights
was by design and by request of the tobacco industry. Due to sunset after only two years,
the tobacco industry thought it would be so unpopular that Congress would never dare do it
again. Instead, the exact opposite happened. When Congress revisited the issue,
it banned smoking on literally all flights within the continental United States.
Smoking bans would follow in nearly all other public spaces, including offices and most
restaurants and bars. This all happened despite the continuing objections of the tobacco industry,
which often invoked a slippery slope argument.
Every time any governmental agency has proposed new rules restricting smoking indoors,
the tobacco industry has stepped forth to say this will literally destroy the restaurant and bar business.
We're going to create mass unemployment. If you work in an office
building, smokers are going to have to spend so much time outside smoking. Your productivity
is going to drop off and your business will fail. In New York City, tobacco promoters vigorously
opposed the Smoke-Free Air Act, which was passed in 2002. Many of them argued that tourists would
stop coming to New York City. It would no longer
be a destination for any foreign visitors because they would be unable to tolerate the rules of New
York City. They terrified restaurant owners and bar owners. The threat went even broader than that.
If we were able to restrict the right of an individual to smoke, there would be no end
to government's restrictions on individual freedoms. Did any of these slippery slope
arguments have merit? That's hard to answer definitively, but there isn't much evidence
they did. The predicted airline violence didn't happen. The tourism and restaurant industries
seem to have done okay. Laws banning smoking indoors now have been in existence for about 30 plus years.
In the United States, there's literally hundreds of cities, 28 states.
Globally, 67 countries ban smoking indoors in virtually every place.
Study after study has shown that restrictions on smoking
in restaurants and bars actually leads to more business, not less. If you look at these research
studies, there is some disagreement about the magnitude of these effects. Still, it's obvious
that the sky didn't fall. And how about the argument that a smoking ban would lead government
to take away individual freedoms?
Not a lot of evidence for that either.
In fact, the freedom to smoke marijuana has increased exponentially, at least outdoors.
And let's not forget, the decline in cigarette smoking has been a huge public health victory.
I've often said to public officials, if the industry is making the slippery slope argument, it means they've run out of substantive arguments. That may be true in the case of smoking, at least, but hindsight is easy.
How can you tell if a slippery slope argument is valid when you're standing at the top of the slope?
Here again is the philosophy professor, Chris Tyndale. The questions we have to raise here are, will A lead to B? Will B lead to C? And then is C undesirable? And furthermore,
is there no way to stop the slope, as it were, stop on the slope and go back? Is this indeed
slippery? Coming up after the break, what has the legal profession contributed to the runaway slippage?
Law is nothing but a series of slippery slopes from the founding till today.
And how big of a problem is that?
I'm Stephen Dubner.
This is Freakonomics Radio.
We'll be right back. To understand how slippery slopes have become a staple of legal argument,
we found another Canadian to talk to, at least a Canadian-American.
My name is Dahlia Lithwick, and I am the senior legal correspondent at Slate Magazine,
and I host their legal podcast,
Amicus.
And you come to this by way of an actual legal background, correct?
Not just journalism?
Yes.
I graduated from law school and then was not a good lawyer.
I was a catastrophically terrible lawyer.
And so I then turned to journalism as my backup plan.
Why are Canadians so interested in studying slippery slopes? Is it perhaps their weather? I think quite literally they spend their lives
slipping down slopes and that might explain it. In 2004, Lithwick wrote a Slate article with the
headline, Slippery Slop. Here's her first sentence. Anyone else bored to tears with
the slippery slope arguments against gay marriage? This was a moment when there was about to be
a big confluence of cases at the U.S. Supreme Court about legalizing same-sex marriage. And
what we had was a lot of public conversation about if you do X, then you're going to do Y.
And these are classic philosophers' slippery slope arguments.
And they were being deployed with some abandoned by people who were saying things like,
if you allow two people of the same sex to marry, then people can, then the piece, I quote, James
Dobson of Focus on the Family saying, quote, you could have polygamy, you could have incest,
you could have marriage between a father and a daughter, you could have two widows or two
sisters or two brothers.
So.
You also cite Rick Santorum.
Do you remember Rick Santorum's predictions?
Yes.
I think he said, quote, if the Supreme Court says that you have the right to consensual gay sex within your home, then you have the right to bigamy.
You have the right to polygamy.
You have the right to incest.
You have the right to adultery.
You have the right to anything, end quote.
And did any of the justices themselves make a slippery slope argument. Yes, Justice Scalia famously made that argument in
Lawrence v. Texas, which was the case in which the court for the first time said that Texas's
prohibition on same-sex sodomy was unconstitutional. In some sense, it opens the door
for what become a whole bunch of cases that protect LGBTQ activity that comes after.
And so kind of presciently, I guess, he said at the time when he dissented in Lawrence,
state laws against bigamy, same-sex marriage, adult incest, prostitution, masturbation,
adultery, fornication, bestiality, and obscenity are likewise sustainable only in light of Bowers.
That was the case that criminalized same-sex sodomy. Validation of laws based on moral
choices. Every single one of these laws is called into question by today's decision.
Hmm. Now, I could see that if someone read that and squinted a little bit, you could say,
well, yeah, of course he's right. So, tell me what it looks like when you're not squinted a little bit, you could say, well, yeah, of course he's right. So tell
me what it looks like when you're not squinting. I think that the point of this article, and I
should note, there was a whole flurry of people writing at this time about slippery slope
arguments. One of the things that's kind of interesting, Stephen, is how little serious
lawyers have thought about this issue. It's not something
that has really received that much rigorous treatment. But there was a whole bunch of lawyers
at the time who were saying, look, if you're going to just throw out a parade of horribles,
just every bad thing in the world, then that's not a tenable legal argument. And what it felt like to those of us
who were, I think, poking a little bit of fun at both Dobson and Santorum, but also Scalia's
thinking, is you can't just unspool absolutely everything you hate and use that as your slippery
slope. It isn't just the hot-button social issues where Supreme Court justices invoke slippery-slope arguments.
I'm reading from a very smart Law Review article that Ruth Sternglatz wrote called Reigning on the Parade of Horribles.
And what she describes is a bunch of tax cases. Commissioner V. Culbertson, the court ruled that intent to contribute capital or labor
sometime in the future is insufficient to make someone a partner in a business for tax purposes.
And she says the majority opinion is like full of slippery slope arguments. If in the present case,
we allow intended future conduct to dictate tax liability, in some future case, we will be forced
to allow a newborn child to be named a partner in the business for tax purposes. She's got a whole bunch of just whomping federal tax cases that also just reside comfortably in slippery slope land. But there, I have to confess, so boring that if I read them all to you, you would weep. Now, those of us who don't know the law, and I'm raising my hand really high here,
from the outside, it would appear as though a lot of legal discussion, especially when judgments
are made, are essentially a recitation of a parade of precedents and so on that does sound
kind of, you know, slopey, if not so slippery. In other words, it feels from the outside like many legal arguments are inherently backwards slippery slope arguments.
So can you talk about what distinguishes, let's say, a slippery slope argument in a legal context from one made in some other public discourse?
The essential thing in the law is that it's tethered to precedent, right? And that's what makes it different from, you know, vague metaphors or vague analytical claims is that what you're saying in
the law is this case, these facts that I'm deciding now, A, are predicated on a case that came before,
right? So there's an analogy at work already. The court doesn't decide identical cases with
identical facts. They extend them, right? So that's part of your slope is getting from that precedent to this.
And then inevitably, what is the next one going to be, right? How is this going to be extended
by future courts? What analogies will they use and how will they get there? And so in some sense,
the law in its truest sense, if you're applying case law and you
are applying precedent, law is nothing but a series of slippery slopes from, you know,
the founding till today.
And so when I say we don't take it seriously enough as a sort of rhetorical legal technique,
given that law is based on those building blocks of analogies and of inferences that
X looks like Y, therefore Y should be Z, is to really not take seriously the project of
how precedent works.
So you are, unless I'm mistaken, violently agreeing with me on one hand, yes?
I am violently agreeing.
And I want to cite Eugene Volokh, who's one of the smartest thinkers.
He really has done, I think, years, if not decades worth of systematic study on this. And I think he says it's both a very serious proposition and also one that goes to crazy places.
My name is Eugene Volokh. I'm a professor of law at UCLA Law School.
Volokh is a prominent legal scholar and blogger.
Around 20 years ago, he published an article in the Harvard Law Review titled The Mechanisms of the Slippery Slope.
Slippery slope arguments are an example of something that pretty much everyone or at least every political side makes as to some things and then when the other side
makes them as to other things then they deride them and say no no that's a fallacy so the left
makes left i say loosely makes uh slippery slope arguments in some areas and resists them in other
areas the right makes them in some areas resist them in other areas well what's really going on
is there a there there Is this really a serious
phenomenon? And if so, can we go beyond the metaphor? Because metaphors, by definition,
are lies, right? If something is literally true, we wouldn't call it a metaphor. And I ultimately
concluded that there are real mechanisms which cause what some people might call slippage down
the slippery slope. Those are real reasons why people might be reluctant to accept even small steps
for fear they may lead to larger steps.
And then the question is, how do you evaluate them?
Because you have to consider them alongside various other considerations.
I asked Dahlia Lithwick, who makes more slippery slope arguments these days,
the left or the right?
I am loathe to say one or the other.
I mean, I think probably pre-Dobbs, I might have said conservatives just because we were hearing
so much in recent years about COVID mandates and about all roads lead to freedom exclamation mark being taken away. I think post-Dobbs, I am hearing an awful lot from
progressives who are saying things like they said it was going to the states. It's not going to the
states. You know, now it's a personhood ban. It's going to be a federal ban. Now it's, you know,
lawsuits being filed against people who just gave internet advice. Dobbs is Dobbs versus Jackson Women's Health Organization, in which the Supreme Court
recently ruled, six to three, that the Constitution does not confer a right to abortion, a ruling
that overturned Roe versus Wade.
So I actually am hearing, I don't even want to say catastrophizing, but I'm certainly
hearing the argument that this isn't in good faith.
And maybe that's another thing that has crept from political discourse into legal discourse when they say they just want a gun registry,
what they're actually saying is Obama's coming to bash down your door and take all your guns.
And I think the same argument has been, I've heard deployed from progressives without a doubt,
saying not just Roe falls, then Obergefell falls, and then Griswold versus Connecticut,
protecting the right to birth control within a marriage. All those fall. But more urgently, when Justice Alito told you that it was going to go back to the states and it was going to be a state-by-state decision and Brett Kavanaugh insisted in his concurrence this was not going to inflect in any way on the right to interstate travel, that was a lie. This is a hoax because they're coming for the federal males.
So the next time I hear a slippery slope argument, should I assume there is
some deceit tucked in there?
I almost wish you wouldn't, because I think that once you impute bad faith,
it's really hard to have a genuine policy conversation, right? And I think that
part of the problem with all this camel's nose under the tent analysis is we are so polarized
right now, both in the political and legal conversations we're having, that imputing bad
faith is where we start, right? Like everyone everyone's lying, and everyone's coming to take away freedom, capital F. And maybe one other
footnote to that, which is one of the things that is worrying about Dobbs and Bruin, which was the
gun decision that came down last year, and I'm not going to do like Supreme Court arcana, but I will say one of the big themes of the last term is that precedent falls in case
after case after case, right? The Supreme Court simply says, we don't care that the rules about
unions are 50 years old, they're gone. We don't care that the line between church and state is
50 years old, it's gone. And truly, truly, truly, if we go back to where you and I started,
which is that precedent matters because that's the building block, if precedent has no value,
rhetorically or otherwise, then you can begin to have these naked bad faith slash power
conversations. And that's incredibly bad for both legal thinking and planning, but it becomes just really easy to
assume everything is about power and pretext. Is the typical slippery slope argument in a legal
context substantially different than a slippery slope argument that we might hear elsewhere from
a politician, from someone in education, healthcare, etc.? So here's what I would suggest, again,
trying to use some contemporary discourse that we're
thinking about in politics, the fight over teaching critical race theory. In some ways,
it's lashed to a bunch of, you know, laws and policies that are being put into effect. But the
argument is, if we teach CRT in the schools,
then white children will be told that they're bad
and they'll feel bad about themselves.
And so that's kind of a version of slippery slope
that it's non-legal insofar as it descends really quickly
into what just feels like feelings ball to me.
And if you think about, I mean, particularly what we're seeing in terms of going after folks in drag, reading to children in libraries, you know, claims about grooming, claims that if certain books are read, then it will lead to bad behaviors. Those feel like slippery slope arguments that
are not so much predicated on if legal outcome X, then legal outcome Y, but just like we're now
just talking about feelings. And I don't know if that's a distinction without a difference,
but to the extent that I think so many of the conversations
that we are having right now in this extra legal political context are rooted in feelings of
grievance and being belittled and not wanting your children to be belittled. They don't feel like
classic legal slippery slope. They just feel like they rush to the place of, I don't want to feel sad.
Let's talk about journalism, the media generally, where you and I both work. Tell me how frequently
you see slippery slope arguments invoked there. And I want to know about any trend lines you can
point to there. One of the things that worries me about journalism as we are
practicing it now is the monetization of scaring people, right? If you scare people's face off,
they will click and we know this. But also I think the commodification of, I will find out
what your anxieties are and I will feed you a thousand things that will convince you that they're
coming for that. That is part of the business model here. And so if that is the case, and I
believe descriptively it is the case more and more, then we are simply feeding people slippery
slopes that end in themselves and their fears, and they are consuming them.
It's funny, for all the examples that you and I could both bring up in journalism, the
one that springs to mind when you describe it like that, the fear-mongering, which, you
know, has been a feature of journalism since the beginning of time, surely.
I think about the weather.
You know, it used to just be winter and it would snow and there might be a blizzard now
and again.
But now I feel like the language, and I'm sure
some of this is new language that meteorologists have come up with to describe more precise
observations. And that's good. But like, I'm looking at a New York Times headline right now,
another significant atmospheric river is bringing heavy rain across California. We had bomb cyclones.
So even the language has become so pronounced that it's hard to get information
without that feelings ball being fully engaged or maybe shoved down your throat. Do you think
I'm right or wrong on pointing to that linguistic hyper tuning?
Look, if I'm being totally honest, you and I can both cite journalism that since the beginning, since the
founding of the Republic, that preyed on ideas that, you know, people were coming for your
children, right? And all of the, if it bleeds, it leads, yellow journalism, that was the daily
gift of most newspapers for a very long time. And so some of this isn't new, but I think you are absolutely correct that we are
in a moment where the skill set, it's just not a rag that some paperboy is like with the funny
like 40s accent, get your daily mail here, right? That was terrible. We're going to have to get
someone who does a better version of paperboy. But I think that that has limited impact on your daily thinking.
But when you are being inundated with, you know, thunder, snow and bomb cyclones, and also that
your media consumption is being curated to do that, that's what's new. I think you're exactly right.
So we're basically all living on our own private slippery slopes that are also steeper than they used to be, is what you're exactly right. So we're basically all living on our own private slippery
slopes that are also steeper than they used to be, is what you're saying? I think that the point
and the object of slippery slopes has converged, right? That in some sense, you both start and end
at throwing folks into a panic about what you and I are now conveniently calling feelings bowl.
And I think that anybody who thinks about policy would tell you that is a horrifically bad framework for thinking about policy.
After the break, even people who are leery of slippery slope arguments find the slope to be super slippery.
Our decisions today are shaped in considerable part by our decisions yesterday, and they will in turn shape our decisions tomorrow.
I'm Stephen Dubner. This is Freakonomics Radio. We'll be right back. Here's a question to consider.
Is a slippery slope argument inherently a fallacious argument?
Ben Gold, our lawyer listener who suggested this episode, says that's what he was taught.
I think it was when I was studying for the LSAT.
You know, you got to look and see why you got something wrong.
And it explains, like, the slippery slope fallacy is a logical fallacy.
Just because X and Y happen doesn't mean that you can assume that, you know, Z will happen.
Chris Tyndale, the argumentation studies professor,
says this view comes from a specific moment in the history of teaching logic.
There was a period in the 70s and 80s where there were very popular courses in North America
that would teach students fallacy labels.
So you identify something as a slippery slope, okay, that's bad.
But that view of these fallacies began to change, at least in academia.
As people invested more time into researching them and looked seriously at what was at stake,
an appreciation grew that these were actually quite good argument forms that can go wrong.
Which is to say, yes, there are plenty of bad slippery slope arguments, but
some slopes are indeed slippery,
and we should be careful about starting down them.
We've got to, first of all, recognize the strategy, slippery slope, among many,
many other strategies. And then having recognized the strategy, look at the context
on a case-by-case basis and decide whether it's a good instance of the argument in that context.
It sounds as though you're saying that calling someone else's argument a fallacy is,
I don't want to be reductive, but a little cheap and lazy.
It can be.
And we could see this particularly in social media.
You can hurl the label around.
It makes it sound like you know what you're talking about.
It makes it sound like you've fully thought this through.
But it may not be the case at all.
Eugene Volokh at the University of California, Los Angeles,
thinks that rushing to call every slippery slope argument a fallacy is bad practice for a different reason.
In all aspects of our lives, of our political lives at least, our decisions today are shaped
in considerable part by our decisions yesterday, and they will in turn shape our decisions tomorrow. That's just the reality
of law. It's the reality of politics, the reality of economics.
Indeed, economists and others have spent a lot of time lately pointing out the virtues of
certain behaviors on the grounds that they will produce even more good behavior. Education,
for instance, good habits in general, like sleeping
and eating well, even kindness. Now, to be sure, there certainly are philosophical works generally
that say slippery slope arguments are a fallacy. What they're referring to is, again, logical
claims. If you take step A, then inevitably step B will be taken.
That's almost never the case.
Almost always it's possible to draw a line between A and B, to draw it in the political process or in the legal process.
So, yes, if you're saying slippery slope is a guarantee, well, that's a fallacy in part because so little is guaranteed in life. However, if your argument is this first step A may change the psychological or the political
or the economic environment in a way that will influence future step B, that's not a fallacy
anymore. It may be right or wrong, but it's not a logical claim.
It can't be evaluated simply, is this a valid logical syllogism?
And according to Volokh, first steps at the top of the slope,
they have a power that should not be underestimated.
Let's say you're an activist and you strongly support abortion rights.
And you see right now, the political environment in my state,
I know that I can fight effectively against broad abortion bans.
In part because there are a lot of people who see things my way on that subject in implemented, then maybe over time, many of our fellow state citizens will come to accept that restricting abortion is a sensible thing for the government to do.
And then we won't be able to block it anymore because part of the rest of society will have changed its attitudes on the subject.
That's a pretty serious
concern. Now, again, will it actually play out? You'd have to try to figure things out as best
you can based on the facts of each particular case. But I think one has to worry about the
first step. You have to ask, will this first step maybe break up this political coalition that I have, or break up the social
attitudes that I'm taking advantage of as an activist in maintaining, for example, the right
to abortion, will it influence that in a way that 5, 10, 15 years down the pike could be extremely
damaging? That's a very serious concern you have to confront. Still, Volokh says, that first step is often necessary,
even with the risk of slippage. For example, back in the 1800s, when there weren't a lot of police
forces, I suppose this would have been a perfectly plausible argument. Look, we start having police
forces, and then eventually that might lead to a police state, where actually police forces don't
just fight street crime, but become the enforcers on behalf of an oppressive government.
That's a perfectly plausible argument.
In fact, this has happened in many places where police have been turned into a police state.
At the same time, the sense was we need to have some degree of policing.
So maybe we might say slippery slope argument is a serious concern, but on balance, we have
to take this first step, regardless of that concern.
So what about the early narrow bans on indoor smoking?
Was that a slippery slope? I do think that relatively narrow smoking restrictions
probably did push in some measure in favor of the adoption of broader ones. Maybe that's a good idea.
As restrictions on smoking become enacted and the legitimacy of the government restricting such behavior becomes validated, people's attitudes, even setting aside their smoking habits, their attitude towards these restrictions might be changed.
They might say, well, this new proposal is just a small step from the previous proposal.
So it's no big deal.
Maybe it's a good idea, or at least maybe it's not something I should fight as much.
That's what I call small change tolerance slopes. So something that's a big proposal
that couldn't be politically enacted from the get-go could be enacted if done one small step
at a time. You may find yourself thinking, as I did, that there isn't much difference between a small change tolerance slope and a slippery slope.
Such is the nature of arguments in this realm.
In any case, we can probably agree on at least a couple things here.
First, slippery slopes can play an outsized role in our imagination of how things might go wrong.
Second, the slippery slope argument has become more
common lately. According to data from Google Books, for instance, use of the phrase has increased
600% since 1980. So why? Why has it gotten so popular?
You know, why? Why does anything catch on?
The philosopher Chris Tyndale again.
It might be because there were some particularly
attractive instances of it that caught people's attention. It is an argument strategy that tends
to be used in moral debates. A lot of the concerns around abortion, genetic manipulation,
things of this nature, they lend themselves to slippery slope arguments. So,
I think we see a lot more of them as society becomes more concerned about these major moral
issues. They're likely to see a prevalence of slippery slope arguments.
Do you feel that the phrase has a certain sheen of sophistication to it as well?
It might be, but there might also be a belief
that people generally understand what you're talking about.
So if I accuse you of an admis recordium,
you look at me puzzled.
But if I accuse you of a slippery slope,
you know what I've accused you of,
then we can start talking.
Wait, I still don't know what you accused me of
the first time.
What was that?
That was an appeal to pity.
Admis recordium.
Ad vericundium is an appeal to pity. Ad misrecordium. Ad veracundium is an appeal to
authority. Again, that's a very prevalent argument form. Is there a phrase for an appeal to common
decency? No. Maybe that's that problem. I'm not sure that there is a phrase that captures that. Maybe you could invent one for us?
Yeah. I don't know what we would call that. I mean, there's certainly appeals to commitment.
There's a growing field of the ethics of argumentation where scholars are exploring
what are the characteristics of an ideal arguer, what dispositions.
Because to some degree, when we're teaching critical thinking or teaching argumentation,
we're encouraging people to develop certain kinds of habits of thought so that in the
future, they will think in similar kinds of ways. They will resist thinking in other kinds of ways.
They become disposed to think appropriately.
So we talk about this as the development of a disposition.
And a lot of education around argumentation is an attempt to create these dispositions,
maybe in children, but later in young adults.
So given what you've been telling us today, how should we respond the next time we hear someone
make a slippery slope argument? Should we assume that they are intellectually and or logically
bankrupt, or should we really give their argument a clear and careful examination
based on the facts with an assumption that it could very well be right.
Yeah, I'd say the latter.
We should always treat people as we'd like to be treated ourselves when we're engaging in discourse.
If I want to be taken seriously, then I'm going to take you seriously.
And maybe you've misused the term, but let's see.
Let's explore that.
So to ask the right kinds of questions,
okay, exactly what you mean by that. How is this outcome undesirable? How is it going to happen
that doing this is going to lead to something else? So I think, yeah, we should treat people
as reasonable arguers. I guess that's its own positive slippery slope then, yes?
Yeah. And that's going to create the kind of dispositions I was talking about before,
where we approach the whole world of argumentation and the reasoning that's out there
in a more constructive way. We're not just focusing on the negatives
and seeing these fallacies that give us this jaded view. We're appreciating that
there's a wide range of strategies that many people reason quite well.
Yeah, I mean, that is almost the existential media question of this moment.
Dahlia Lithwick, again. I had asked her whether in this era of slippery slope arguments,
it's possible to have genuine conversations about public policy
without sliding into hyperbole. I mean, that in some sense goes beyond law and politics,
and it goes to, are we even having conversation? You know, are we having two bubbled, siloed
conversations in which the set of presumptions are so wildly disparate that we, you know, I can certainly stipulate that
certain things are in good faith, but if nobody's listening, then we're in trouble. In some ways,
I almost want to say it requires an ability to speak across bubbles that is no longer fully in
evidence. What do you think? I'd love to hear your reactions to this episode. Our email is radio
at freeconomics.com. Thanks to Dahlia Lithwick, Chris Tindale, Eugene Volokh, Matt Myers,
and especially Ben Gold for suggesting the topic. Coming up next time on the show.
ESG investing is about investors wanting to think that they're not doing evil. ESG investing,
that's environmental, social, and governance. It has gained traction and prestige, but does it work?
I would hope that once people see my research, that it becomes less prestigious to do something that can be actively counterproductive.
That's next time on the show. Until then, take care of yourself, and if you can, someone else too.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio. You can find our entire archive
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This episode was produced by Alina Kullman with research from Danielle Elliott and mixed by Greg
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