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False zero-sum game

140 bytes added, 13:49, March 19, 2020
cognitive bias
A '''false zero-sum game''', or '''zero-sum fallacy''', is the [[logical fallacy]] of asserting, typically without analysis, that a particular situation is a [[zero-sum game]], when in fact it is not. For example, [[liberal]]s assert that the [[economy]] is a zero-sum game in order to justify [[income redistribution]]. The false zero-sum game is a type of [[false dilemma]]; it can alternatively be considered a form of [[begging the question]]. In [[economics]], a particular form of the false zero-sum game is called the '''lump-of-labor fallacy''', which assumes that since there is (supposedly) a fixed amount of work to be done in the world, changing the number of workers will cause an inverse change in the amount of work per worker, or ''vice versa''. The fallacy derives from a [[cognitive bias]] called zero-sum thinking, in which humans tend to see a zero-sum game even when it is absent.
[[Category:Logical Fallacies]]
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