Loaded question

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Cogito ergo sum
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Not to be confused with loaded language or a leading question.
Springfield Police Department webpage: If you've committed a crime and you want to confess, click "YES". Otherwise, click "NO".

[Homer clicks "NO"]

Springfield Police Department webpage: You have chosen "NO", meaning you've committed a crime, but don't want to confess. A paddywagon is now speeding to your home!
The Simpsons[1]

A loaded question is a logical fallacy that occurs when statements or questions are designed to confuse listeners into tacitly accepting something (which isn't obviously clear in the question) as true.

Alternate names[edit]

  • complex question
  • ill-posed question
  • fallacy of interrogation
  • fallacy of presupposition
  • fallacy of interrogative presupposition
  • fallacy of many questions
  • plurium interrogationum
  • surfeit of questions
  • trick question

Forms[edit]

Loaded questions come in two forms.

Trick questions[edit]

Trick questions force the respondent to either admit to an opinion or fact they do not share, deny a factual premise, and/or make themself look like a scumbag.Wikipedia The most famous example of a trick question like this is: "Have you stopped beating your wife?" — an instinctive answer of "yes" or "no" means saying that you have a wife who you have beaten in the past. It requires a more considered answer of "I've never been married" or "I've never beaten my wife" to respond without accepting its implication.[note 1]

An example of forced opinion: "So, you are going to vote for that lazy Obama?" If one says yes, they appear to concede that Obama is lazy, if they say no, they are implying they will vote for his rival. Another option would be to reply in a way that implicitly rejects the loaded language by substituting more neutral language: "I am going to vote for Obama."

An example of forced fact: "So you are one of those god-denying evolutionists?" The interrogee may accept evolution, but also could be, say, a Christian.

Leading questions[edit]

Leading questions supply the answer in the question, but the following examples all consist of a statement followed by a question, invoking arguments of association such as: "Smart people have been shown to like Obama. Do you like Obama?" "It's been proven that good and righteous Christians such as you like banana cream pie; do you like banana cream pie?" While these examples are obvious, if the topic is in an area one is unfamiliar with, and the "associations" use what appear to be expert opinions, one may well be moved to agree without even realizing what one has done. Amendment 2 in Colorado was a prime example of this.[note 2] Few people understood the language of the bill, including many people in the legal profession. Polls would say to people "Experts analyzing this bill agree that it protects workers like yourself from being the victim of special rights groups. Workers all over the state are saying they feel threatened by this move, since it means someone can be hired who isn't qualified simply due to these special rights. Knowing that, and understanding how hard it is today to find a job, are you with us in our support of Amendment 2?"

Examples[edit]

See also[edit]

External links[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. The correct answer is "mu", a Japanese word that more or less can be translated as "null", or in this case, "this question has no appropriate answer".
  2. In 1992, Colorado voters approved an amendment to the state constitution that prohibited anti-discrimination measures protecting LBGT people. Four years later, the US Supreme Court threw it out in Romer v. Evans.

References[edit]