Analogy
An analogy is a comparison between two things that claims: this unfamiliar thing works like this familiar thing, so we can reason about it the same way. Analogy is one of science’s most powerful tools — it allows knowledge about a well-understood domain to scaffold understanding of a new one.
graph LR A[Two things compared] A --> B{Similar in the\nrelevant respect?} B -->|Yes| GA[Good Analogy\nReasoning holds] B -->|Superficially only| FA[False Analogy\nFallacy] B -->|Not in the right respect| FA GA --> G1[Relevant · Insightful\nPartial · Provisional · Fruitful]
How It Appears Per Course
PHIL 252
Introduced in Unit 7 as the foundation for understanding causal reasoning in science. Before getting to causal fallacies, the unit establishes that analogy is how science builds causal hypotheses — and that false analogy is how that process goes wrong. Also appears in Unit 6 as the basis of stereotyping (analogical reasoning applied to people).
What Makes an Analogy Good
A good analogy is all five of the following:
| Quality | What it means |
|---|---|
| Relevant | The similarity actually matters to the conclusion |
| Insightful | It reveals something non-obvious |
| Partial | It doesn’t claim the two things are identical — just similar in key ways |
| Provisional | Open to revision as we learn more |
| Fruitful | Generates useful predictions or further questions |
Good analogies are scaffolding, not permanent structure. Science uses them to get started, not as final explanations.
The False Analogy
False analogy compares two things that are either:
- Only superficially similar — they share a label or surface feature, but differ in all relevant ways
- Similar in many ways, but not in the relevant respect for the argument being made
“This new vaccine is experimental, just like the drugs Nazi scientists tested on prisoners. So we shouldn’t trust it.” The word “experimental” is shared — but context, purpose, ethics, and regulatory oversight are all completely different. The similarity is real but irrelevant to the conclusion.
“Businesses are like sports teams — cut the weakest players every year.” Businesses and sports teams share some features, but differ in the relevant respect: businesses aren’t zero-sum, can grow, and ‘weakest’ members often do essential support work.
Cross-Course Connections
InformalFallacies — False analogy is an informal fallacy (fallacy of distorting the facts)
FalseCause — Analogical reasoning gone wrong often leads to false causal claims
Bias — Stereotyping is a form of analogical reasoning that fails when critical differences are ignored
Key Points for Exam/Study
- Analogy = reasoning from familiar → unfamiliar by similarity
- A good analogy is partial and provisional — it’s a tool, not a proof
- False analogy = the similarity is real but not relevant to the conclusion, OR only superficial
- The test: ask whether the two things are similar in the respect that matters for the argument
- Science depends on analogy but must be willing to revise or discard analogies as knowledge grows
Open Questions
- When does a productive scientific analogy become a false one? Is it purely about relevance, or also about the stage of inquiry?