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We have an instinctive love of traditions. To see how powerful this love
can be, just consider that many holiday customs - eggs at Easter, for example - are
actually older than the holiday they are used to celebrate. The Christian holiday of
Easter is a celebration of the resurrection of Christ. It has nothing to do with rabbits
and eggs, both of which are fertility symbols dating from long before Christianity
reached Europe. Our love of tradition has kept these symbols alive for well
over a thousand years. Traditions often represent the
accumulated wisdom of past generations. Humans have achieved their mastery of the world
largely because each new generation does not have to "re-invent the wheel," but
can draw upon lessons already learned. When we do take the time to re-think our
beliefs, we usually discover that the beliefs of the past check out. They are "tried
and true." They have "stood the test of time." Hence, following the
opinions of the past is often not a bad idea.
However, the fallacy of Appeal to Tradition is fallacious when it confuses a long
tradition of careful testing with the mere tendency to hold on to ideas because
they are old. An idea that really can "stand the test of time" can also stand to
be checked again. It is because we constantly test ideas that old ideas have a tendency to
be true. If we began accepting ideas merely because they were old, we would undermine the
very principle that the "test of time" is based upon. |