7.1.10

-- 11 -- Fallacies, Marking


-- 11 -- TFY C10 Fallacies, CRCB C10 Marking



TFY Chapter Ten Fallacies

This chapter will teach you about the names and meanings of eleven fallacies.  Fallacies may be accidental or intentional; many are amusing, all are manipulative; each sidesteps the work of constructing a fair and well-reasoned argument.  Multiple examples and exercises will teach you how to recognize a number of basic fallacies and understand why they are fallacious





Web Links \http://www.unc.edu/depts/wcweb/handouts/fallacies.html#3
Chapter 10back to top
LOGICAL FALLACIES
Here are two more perspectives on the fallacies with definitions and examples.
http://www.csun.edu/~dgw61315/fallacies.html
LOGICAL FALLACIES - Intrepid Software
Here are two more perspectives on the fallacies with definitions and examples.
http://www.intrepidsoftware.com/fallacy/toc.php
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Chapter 10


Appeal to BandwagonThis fallacy seeks to persuade by appealing to the wisdom of the momentum of a popular opinion.
Appeal to False AuthorityThis fallacy seeks to persuade by citing fake, questionable, or inappropriate authority.
Appeal to FearThis fallacy seeks to persuade by arousing fear that clouds rationality.
Appeal to PityThis fallacy seeks to persuade by arousing pity.
Circular ReasoningThis fallacy assumes what it is supposed to prove by reasserting the conclusion, sometimes in different words, as though this conclusion needed no supporting reasons.
FallacyA fallacy is an invalid, argument that can be deceptive or misleading.
Fallacy of Word AmbiguityThis fallacy seeks to gain an advantage in an argument by using vague undefined words that can be interpreted in more than one way.
InferTo use imagination and reasoning to fill in missing facts. To connect the dots.
Misleading EuphemismsThis fallacy hides meaning by creating words that make a less acceptable idea seem positive or unrecognizable.
OpinionOpinion is a word used to include an unsupported belief, a supported argument, an expert’s judgment, prevailing public sentiment, and a formal statement by a court.
Personal AttackThis fallacy attacks a person’s character without addressing the issue.
Pointing to Another WrongThis fallacy distracts attention from an admitted wrongdoing by claiming that similar actions went unnoticed and unpunished.
Poisoning the WellThis fallacy seeks to prejudice others against a person, group or idea so that their arguments cannot be heard on their own merits.
Prejudicial LanguageThis fallacy attempts to persuade through the use of loaded words that convey a bias.
Principal claim and reasonsThese are the two parts of an argument. The principal claim is the thesis or conclusion. The reasons support this claim through evidence or other claims. A claim is an assertion about something.
Red HerringThis fallacy distracts attention away from the lack of proof for a claim by raising irrelevant issues.
Straw manThis fallacy misrepresents or caricatures an opponent’s position, then refutes the false replica created.
ThinkingPurposeful mental activity such as reasoning, deciding, judging, believing, supposing, expecting, intending, recalling, remembering, visualizing, imagining, devising, inventing, concentrating, conceiving, considering.

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