The error of incorrectly accusing someone of a Hasty Generalization when they are, in fact, identifying a legitimate and evidence-based pattern, trend, or systemic issue. This fallacy fallacy uses the fear of overgeneralizing as a shield against uncomfortable truths. It demands an impossible standard of proof—near-universal incidence—before allowing any inductive conclusion, thereby paralyzing insight and protecting flawed systems from scrutiny.
Hasty Generalization Fallacy Fallacy *Example: A researcher notes that in 19 out of the last 20 high-profile corruption trials, the defendant was a political ally of the current attorney general. A critic sneers, "Hasty Generalization Fallacy. That's just a handful of cases; you can't imply bias." The critic is wrong. A 95% correlation in a defined set is a robust pattern, not a hasty leap. The fallacy fallacy is deployed to invalidate a statistically valid observation.*
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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