A rhetorical fallacy where someone dismisses an argument or position by comparing it to Flat Earth belief, regardless of actual differences in evidence, reasoning, or plausibility. "That's like believing the Earth is flat" becomes a magic phrase that ends discussion—as if the comparison itself proves the point false. The fallacy lies in using the most extreme, universally rejected example as a cudgel against any view that seems unconventional. But not every unconventional view is Flat Earth; not every challenge to consensus is equally baseless. The analogy ignores context, evidence, and the actual reasons for believing or doubting. It's intellectual laziness dressed as devastating critique.
"I suggested that current models of consciousness might be incomplete and that alternative approaches deserve consideration. Response: 'Might as well believe the Earth is flat.' That's Flat Earth Analogy Fallacy—comparing a legitimate scientific debate to a debunked pseudoscience. Consciousness studies is an open field; Flat Earth is settled nonsense. The analogy doesn't engage my argument—it just tries to shame me with association. But shame isn't logic, and analogies aren't evidence."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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