Two wrongs make a right (logical fallacy)
Two wrongs make a right is a logical fallacy that occurs when it is assumed that if one wrong is committed, another second wrong will cancel it out. Like many fallacies, it typically appears as the hidden major premise in an enthymeme.Often it can be a fallacy of distraction or an attempt to change the issue.
For example:
- Speaker A: President Williams lied in his testimony to Congress. He should not do that.
- Speaker B: But you're ignoring the fact that President Johnson lied in his Congressional testimony!
Ad hominem attack in the tu quoque form is a subfallacy. Accusing another person of not practicing what they preach clearly is not enough to reject or justify either.
It could be considered an appeal to emotion when it is used as an explicit appeal to revenge:
- They blew up our storehouses! So, we should burn down their village.
This fallacy is often committed by children. An example:
- Parent: Jim, why did you pull your sister's hair, don't you know that's wrong.
- Jim: I know, but she pinched me first.