Connection: Argument & Fallacies ↔ Lobbying & Business Influence
The Link
PHIL252 teaches you to construct and evaluate arguments — to identify premises, spot fallacies, and recognize deceptive framing. ADMN201 introduces lobbying and business influence on government as a key mechanism of the mixed economy. These two meet in a very practical way: lobbying is applied argument. Lobbyists construct cases for why a policy serves the public interest. Trade associations run advocacy campaigns built on persuasion. And the Competition Act explicitly prohibits misleading advertising — a form of fallacious communication at commercial scale.
From PHIL252
PHIL252 provides the tools to assess any persuasion attempt:
- Cogency standard: a good argument has acceptable, relevant, and sufficient premises. Many lobbying arguments fail the sufficiency test — they cherry-pick data to support a pre-determined conclusion.
- Informal fallacies: appeals to authority, straw man, and false cause are all common in policy advocacy.
- Bullshit vs. lying: lobbyists sometimes operate in the “bullshit” space — making claims with strategic disregard for their truth, rather than outright lying.
- False cause: policy advocates often present correlation data (industry jobs created, GDP contribution) as proof of causal claims about a regulation’s effects.
- Data visualization: industry groups frequently use misleading charts — truncated axes, cherry-picked time periods — to make their case visually.
See Argument, InformalFallacies, Bullshit, FalseCause, DataVisualization
From ADMN 201
ADMN201 introduces the formal mechanisms of business influence on government:
- Lobbyists: registered professionals who represent company interests with government officials. The case they make is an argument about policy outcomes.
- Trade associations: industry groups that conduct coordinated advocacy. Their position papers and briefs are extended arguments for specific regulatory outcomes.
- Advertising: mass-market persuasion aimed at shaping public opinion on policy issues.
- Competition Act, s.52: prohibits false or misleading marketing — the legal system’s response to the most harmful forms of fallacious commercial communication.
See BusinessGovernmentRelations
Why This Matters
Understanding the argument/fallacy toolkit makes you a more critical consumer of policy advocacy and advertising. When a trade association claims a regulation will “destroy 50,000 jobs,” you can ask: Is that a correlational claim dressed up as causal? What’s the evidence quality? What premises are unstated? Is this an appeal to consequences rather than a factual argument? These are PHIL252 questions asked in an ADMN201 context.
Conversely, understanding the institutional role of lobbying (from ADMN201) gives context to why sophisticated persuasion matters — the stakes are regulations, tax policy, and billions in government contracts.
Related Concepts
Argument, InformalFallacies, Bullshit, FalseCause, DataVisualization, BusinessGovernmentRelations, PrivateEnterprise
graph LR subgraph PHIL252["PHIL 252"] A[Argument Structure] B[Informal Fallacies] C[Bullshit Taxonomy] D[False Cause] E[Data Visualization] end subgraph ADMN201["ADMN 201"] F[Lobbying] G[Trade Associations] H[Advertising] I[Competition Act s.52<br/>False Advertising Ban] end A -->|"lobbyists build arguments"| F B -->|"advocacy often uses fallacies"| G C -->|"strategic disregard for truth"| H D -->|"correlation as causation in policy claims"| F E -->|"misleading charts in industry briefs"| G B -->|"legal prohibition on fallacious claims"| I