Sounds like a special case or “judging an argument by its appearance” (maybe somebody can make that snappier). It’s fairly similar to “it’s in latin, therefore it must be profound”, “it’s 500 pages, therefore it must be carefully thought-out” and “it’s in helvetica, therefore it’s from a trustworthy source”.
Note that this is entirely separate from judging by the arguer’s appearance.
It’s fairly similar to “it’s in latin, therefore it must be profound”
Or to sound more profound, quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur. With that in mind, the fallacy of dressing up in mathematical clothing might be dubbed the Quidquid Mathematice fallacy, or Quidquid Per Numeros (“whatever (is said) with numbers”).
Sounds like a special case or “judging an argument by its appearance” (maybe somebody can make that snappier). It’s fairly similar to “it’s in latin, therefore it must be profound”, “it’s 500 pages, therefore it must be carefully thought-out” and “it’s in helvetica, therefore it’s from a trustworthy source”.
Note that this is entirely separate from judging by the arguer’s appearance.
Or to sound more profound, quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur. With that in mind, the fallacy of dressing up in mathematical clothing might be dubbed the Quidquid Mathematice fallacy, or Quidquid Per Numeros (“whatever (is said) with numbers”).