A short story review of âLove is a fallacyâ
By EG Manilag, Staff Writer
4/5
Max Shulmanâs Love is a Fallacy is a short story which is comedic and simultaneously a deep masterpiece. Its cleverness and humour in introducing logical fallacies and the basics of how love works is very entertaining as well. This review has spoilersâread the story if you donât want to miss out!
In this first-person narrative, the author himself is the main protagonist. The plot of the story generally revolves around an arrogant and condescending boy genius who declares himself in these grandiose words:
âCool was I and logical. Keen, calculating, perspicacious, acute, and astuteâI was all of these. My brain was as powerful as a dynamo, precise as a chemistâs scales, as penetrating as a scalpel. Andâthink of it! âI only eighteen.â
He also describes his roommate at the university, Petey Bellows, âdumb as an ox,â and Polly Epsy, the girl of his dreams, as âbeautiful,â and âgracious,â but not intelligent. On that he says,
âIntelligent she was not. In fact, she veered in the opposite direction. But I believed that under my guidance she would smarten up.â
Additionally, Polly is Peteyâs girlfriend, and this irritates Max the most. However, because of a special âraccoon coatâ which he possesses, everything changesâthe tables turn since Petey is blindly obsessed with the coat that Max has.
âIâd give anything for a raccoon coat. Anything!â says Petey. Max guesses that he can bargain the coat to Petey to date Polly, and strangely, it works. Petey is reasonably hesitant at first, however, Maxâs manipulative powers convince Petey to exchange his girlfriend for the coatâit seems that his lust for the raccoon coat was much stronger than his love.
On their first date, Max tries to shape Polly the way he wants her to beâsmartâand uses the teachings of logic as a clearly logical man himself. Condescendingly, he teaches Polly about logic and logical fallacies, thinking he would change her for the better and smarten her up. Unfortunately, in the final wave of the story as their dating progresses, events take an unexpected route as Maxâs plan completely backfires, leading to a satirical fin.
The story is a worthwhile one. It tells us that love is not defined by logic, as love is emotional, and we can see that in Maxâs actions. He tries to use logic to win love and doing so is a logical fallacy.
What comes to my mind regarding this story is a famous line from Otis Milburn on the TV series Sex Education. Milburn says, âLove isnât about grand gestures, or the moon and the stars. Itâs just dumb luck. And sometimes, you meet someone who feels the same way. And then, sometimes, youâre unlucky.â What he said couldnât be more correct. Love is simply just dumb luckâhowever, love is not false.
Ultimately, love is a fallacy in its functions, but it is not a fallacy per se. It is a fallacy in its functions because in romantic relationships, love usually takes the good and disregards the bad, even if the bad outweighs the good. Although love has fallacious characteristics, love is not a pure fallacyâlove is more than that. Just because itâs blind, random, and unpredictable doesnât mean itâs wrong.