Send a link to your students to track their progress
178 Terms
1
New cards
Appeal to Force (the "Might-Makes-Right" Fallacy)
2
New cards
This argument uses force, the threat of force, or some other unpleasant backlash to make the audience accept a conclusion.
3
New cards
Ad Hominem Fallacy
4
New cards
Attacking or praising the people who make an argument rather than discussing the argument itself.
5
New cards
Bandwagon Approach
6
New cards
"Everybody is doing it." This argument asserts that, since the majority of people believes an argument or chooses a particular course of action, the argument must be true or the course of action must be the best one. "Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect." --Mark Twain.
7
New cards
Appeal to Tradition
8
New cards
This line of thought asserts that a premise must be true because people have always believed it or done it.
9
New cards
Appeal to Improper Authority
10
New cards
An appeal to a famous person or a source that may not be reliable.
11
New cards
Appeal to Biased Authority
12
New cards
In this sort of appeal, the authority is one who truly is knowledgeable on the topic, but unfortunately one who may have professional or personal motivations that render that judgment suspect.
13
New cards
Begging the Question
14
New cards
The fallacy is committed when someone has made a conclusion based on a premise that lacks support. For example, stating that "chinaberries are good for people because they grow on trees."
15
New cards
Circular Reasoning
16
New cards
a subtype of begging the question. Often the authors word the two statements sufficiently differently to obscure the fact that the same proposition occurs as both a premise and a conclusion. For example: A confused student argues: "You can't give me a C. I'm an A student!" Another Example: "God exists. We know this because the Bible says so. And we know the Bible is correct because the Bible was written by God."
17
New cards
Hasty Generalization
18
New cards
Mistaken use of inductive reasoning when there are too few samples to prove a point.
19
New cards
Misleading Statistic
20
New cards
Suppose an individual argues that women must be incompetent drivers, and he points out that last Tuesday at the Department of Motor Vehicles, 50% of the women who took the driving test failed.
This fallacy establishes a cause/effect relationship that does not exist. There are various Latin names for various analyses of the fallacy: "After this, therefore because of this." This type of false cause occurs when the writer mistakenly assumes that, because the first event preceded the second event, it must mean the first event must have caused the later one.
23
New cards
The Red Herring Fallacy
24
New cards
a deliberate attempt to change the subject or divert the argument from the real question at issue.
25
New cards
Straw Man Fallacy
26
New cards
a writer creates an oversimplified, easy-to-refute argument, places it in the mouth of his opponent, and then tries to "win" the debate by knocking down that empty or trivial argument.
27
New cards
Slippery Slope Fallacy
28
New cards
the speaker argues that, once the first step is undertaken, a second or third step will inevitably follow, much like the way one step on a slippery incline will cause a person to fall and slide all the way to the bottom.
29
New cards
False Dilemma Fallacy (Either/Or Fallacy)
30
New cards
This fallacy occurs when a writer builds an argument upon the assumption that there are only two choices or possible outcomes when actually there are several.
31
New cards
Faulty Analogy
32
New cards
Relying only on comparisons to prove a point rather than arguing deductively and inductively.
33
New cards
Equivocation
34
New cards
Using a word in a different way than the author used it in the original premise, or changing definitions halfway through a discussion.
35
New cards
Stacking the Deck (cherry-picking evidence)
36
New cards
In this fallacy, the speaker "stacks the deck" in her favor by ignoring examples that disprove the point, and listing only those examples that support her case.
37
New cards
Argument from the Negative
38
New cards
Arguing from the negative asserts that, since one position is untenable, the opposite stance must be true.
39
New cards
Loaded Question Fallacy
40
New cards
Phrasing a question or statement in such a way as to imply another unproven statement is true without evidence or discussion.
41
New cards
Analysis
42
New cards
the separating of material into its constituent elements and determining its essential features and their relations
43
New cards
Argumentation
44
New cards
The act of using reasons to justify claims
45
New cards
Syllogism
46
New cards
a logical argument in which a conclusion is inferred from two premises. It's a form of deductive reasoning. It goes like this: (1) All dogs are mammals. (2) Mingo is a dog. (3) Therefore, Mingo is a mammal
47
New cards
Chiasmus
48
New cards
A rhetorical or literary figure in which words, grammatical constructions, or concepts are repeated in reverse order, in the same or modified form. EX."Poetry is the record of the best and happiest moments of the happiest and best minds." EX. "Pleasure's a sin, and sometimes sin's a pleasure" (Byron). EX. "He was wise and compassionate as a counselor, but as a teacher inefficient and ineffectual." EX. "It's not the men in my life, it's the life in my men" (Mae West).
49
New cards
Ellipsis
50
New cards
Omission of one or more words for conciseness and effect. Ex. "Youth is a blunder; manhood a struggle; old age a regret." (The word "is" is omitted after the first clause.)
51
New cards
Asyndeton
52
New cards
omission of conjunction before the last item in a series. Ex. "Government of the people, by the people, for the people..."
53
New cards
Allegory
54
New cards
a story in which things and people represent something entirely other—an idea or a philosophy. typically contain within a moral or lesson.
55
New cards
Simple Sentence
56
New cards
subject-verb (I went to the store.)
57
New cards
Complex Sentence
58
New cards
independent clause and dependent clause (While traveling to the store, I saw my friend.)
59
New cards
Compound Sentence
60
New cards
2 independent clauses joined by a conjunction (I went to the store, and I bought candy.)
61
New cards
Antecedent
62
New cards
a word, phrase, clause, or sentence, to which another word (especially a pronoun) refers. "Mike lost his penguin and he can't find it."
63
New cards
Nostalgia
64
New cards
a sentimental longing or wistful affection for the past.
65
New cards
Enumeration
66
New cards
the listing of things; to list one thing after another in prose.
67
New cards
Dichotomy
68
New cards
a division or contrast between two things that are or are represented as beings opposed or entirely different. "There doesn't need to be a \__________ between religion and science."
69
New cards
Hypophora
70
New cards
Asking a question and then answering that same question. "What did you come here for? To learn how to have a good time!"
71
New cards
Rebuttal
72
New cards
merely a response to the counterargument, advancing your side of an issue--may not be effective, may not prove someone or something wrong.
73
New cards
Refutation
74
New cards
to use evidence to prove a counterargument is wrong--this is done in response to another argument. When a rebuttal is absolutely effective, it becomes a \______________.
75
New cards
Concession
76
New cards
acknowledging other points of view--admitting that the opposition has a good point. This builds credibility.
77
New cards
Message (Rhetorical Situation Component)
78
New cards
the subject matter of a work of rhetoric.
79
New cards
Exigence (Rhetorical Situation Component)
80
New cards
the provocation (or reason) to make the argument or work of rhetoric. Why did the writer give this speech?
81
New cards
Purpose (Rhetorical Situation Component)
82
New cards
what writer or speaker hopes to achieve by writing or giving a speech.
83
New cards
Audience (Rhetorical Situation Component)
84
New cards
awareness of the specific, intended audience of a work of rhetoric—awareness of the traits and perspectives of this audience.
85
New cards
Context (Rhetorical Situation Component)
86
New cards
The time, place, occasion, or other relevant contextual information about the moment of the work of rhetoric.
87
New cards
Writer/speaker (Rhetorical Situation Component)
88
New cards
Our awareness of how the writer or speaker's perceptions, or perspective, governs the text.
89
New cards
Connotation
90
New cards
the secondary, implied or suggested meaning of a word. The word "weasel" suggest negativity—a tendency to lie or cheat or steal
91
New cards
Denotation
92
New cards
the actual, literal meaning of the word. Weasel simply means a slender carnivorous mammal.
93
New cards
Diction
94
New cards
(word choice) a writer or speaker's choice of words. Synonymous with style. Choosing the words "lied about" rather than "mistakenly stated" is a choice in diction.
95
New cards
Syntax
96
New cards
The grammatical order in which words are placed. It might be broken for effect.
97
New cards
Tone
98
New cards
The attitude the writer takes towards her subject, or in her writing. When describing it, we use adjectives: angry, sarcastic, solemn, playful, timid, etc.
99
New cards
Explicit
100
New cards
Directly stated. Leaving no question about the meaning.