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:Logic:
Fallacies:
Distraction
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False Dilemma:
two choices are given when in fact there are three options
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Ignorance: because something is not known to be true, it is assumed
false
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Slippery Slope:
a series of increasingly unacceptable consequences is drawn
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Complex Question:
two unrelated points are joined as a single proposition
Appeals to Motives in Place of
Support
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Appeal to Force:
the reader is persuaded to agree by force
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Appeal to Pity:
the reader is persuaded to agree by sympathy
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Consequences:
the reader is warned of unacceptable consequences
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Prejudicial
Language: value or moral goodness is attached to believing the
author
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Popularity:
a proposition is argued to be true because it is widely held to
be true
Changing the Subject
Attacking the Person:
-
Person's
character is attacked
-
Person's circumstances are
noted
-
Person does not practise
what is preached
Appeal to Authority:
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Authority
is not an expert in the field
-
Experts in the field disagree
-
Authority was joking, drunk,
or in some other way not being serious
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Anonymous Authority: the
authority in question is not named
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Style Over Substance: the
manner in which an argument (or arguer) is presented is felt to
affect the truth of the conclusion
Inductive Fallacies
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Hasty Generalization:
the sample is too small to support an inductive generalization
about a population
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Unrepresentative
Sample: the sample is unrepresentative of the sample as a whole
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False Analogy:
the two objects or events being compared are relevantly dissimilar
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Slothful Induction:
the conclusion of a strong inductive argument is denied despite
the evidence to the contrary
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Fallacy of
Exclusion: evidence which would change the outcome of an inductive
argument is excluded from consideration
Fallacies Involving Statistical
Syllogisms
Causal Fallacies
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Post Hoc:
because one thing follows another, it is held to cause the other
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Joint effect:
one thing is held to cause another when in fact they are both
the joint effects of an underlying cause
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Insignificant:
one thing is held to cause another, and it does, but it is insignificant
compared to other causes of the effect
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Wrong Direction:
the direction between cause and effect is reversed
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Complex Cause:
the cause identified is only a part of the entire cause of the
effect
Missing the Point
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Begging the
Question: the truth of the conclusion is assumed by the premises
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Irrelevant
Conclusion: an argument in defense of one conclusion instead proves
a different conclusion
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Straw Man:
the author attacks an argument different from (and weaker than)
the opposition's best argument
Fallacies of Ambiguity
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Equivocation:
the same term is used with two different meanings
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Amphiboly:
the structure of a sentence allows two different interpretations
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Accent: the
emphasis on a word or phrase suggests a meaning contrary to what
the sentence actually says
Category Errors
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Composition:
because the attributes of the parts of a whole have a certain
property, it is argued that the whole has that property
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Division: because
the whole has a certain property, it is argued that the parts
have that property
Non Sequitur
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Affirming the
Consequent: any argument of the form: If A then B, B, therefore
A
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Denying the
Antecedent: any argument of the form: If A then B, Not A, thus
Not B
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Inconsistency:
asserting that contrary or contradictory statements are both true
Syllogistic Errors
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Fallacy of
Four Terms: a syllogism has four terms
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Undistributed
Middle: two separate categories are said to be connected because
they share a common property
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Illicit Major:
the predicate of the conclusion talks about all of something,
but the premises only mention some cases of the term in the predicate
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Illicit Minor:
the subject of the conclusion talks about all of something, but
the premises only mention some cases of the term in the subject
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Fallacy of
Exclusive Premises: a syllogism has two negative premises
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Fallacy of
Drawing an Affirmative Conclusion From a Negative Premise
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Existential
Fallacy: a particular conclusion is drawn from universal premises
Fallacies of Explanation
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Subverted Support:
The phenomenon being explained doesn't exist
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Non-support:
Evidence for the phenomenon being explained is biased
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Untestability:
The theory which explains cannot be tested
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Limited Scope:
The theory which explains can only explain one thing
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Limited Depth:
The theory which explains does not appeal to underlying causes
Fallacies of Definition
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Too Broad:
The definition includes items which should not be included
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Too Narrow:
The definition does not include all the items which should be
included
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Failure to
Elucidate: The definition is more difficult to understand than
the word or concept being defined
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Circular Definition:
The definition includes the term being defined as a part of the
definition
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Conflicting
Conditions: The definition is self-contradictory
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