Objectives
In this section we learn about fallacies. A fallacy is a typical mistake in reasoning.
When you are finished with this section, you should be able to identify instances of all
the following fallacies:
- Accident (Appeal to a saying)
- Ad hominem
- Appeal to general belief
- Appeal to ignorance
- Appeal to inappropriate authority
- Affirming the consequent
- Bandwagon arguments
- Begging the question
- Circular reasoning
- Compatibility with all states of affairs
- Composition
- Continuum fallacy
- Denying the antecedent
- Division
- Equivocation
- False dilemma (false dichotomy, black and white fallacy)
- False, misleading, dubious analogy
- Gambler's fallacy
- Hasty generalization
- Impromptu definition (persuasive definition, definitional dodge)
- Inconsistency and special pleading
- Inference based solely on temporal succession (the post hoc fallacy)
- Inference from a correlation to a causal link (the correlation fallacy)
- Innuendo, loaded words
- Irrelevant emotional appeal (appeal to popular but irrelevant attitudes
and emotions, such as appeal to fear, guilt, vanity, pity, patriotism, etc.)
- Loaded or complex question
- Objectionable vagueness
- Poisoning the well
- Pooh-pooh fallacy
- Quibbling
- Slippery slope
- Straw man
Readings
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