AP fallacy vocab

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20 Terms

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Appealing to pity

Making the audience feel sorry or guilty in order to convince them to do something or take your point of view.

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Appealing to prejudice

Getting the audience riled up against (or for) a group/person instead of focusing on the issue. This is the fallacy that uses our likes and dislikes to manipulate us.

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Appealing to tradition

Saying you have to do things this way, because you've always done it this way.

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False Analogy

When two cases are not sufficiently parallel to lead readers to accept a claim of connection between them.

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Attacking the character of opponents (Ad hominem)

ignoring or distracting from content through personal attacks - better to give thoughtful responses to arguments than to base arguments on personal attacks

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Attributing false causes (post hoc, ergo propter hoc)

Assuming (or implying) that something is the result of something that happened just before.

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Guilt by Association

calls someone's character into question by examining the character of that person's associates.

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Begging the question

Often called circular reasoning, __ occurs when the be￾lievability of the evidence depends on the believability of the claim.

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Equivocating

misleading or hedging with ambiguous word choices

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Ignoring the question

ignores the real issue by the use of distracting information that has no bearing on the case

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Jumping to conclusions

drawing a conclusion that isn't supported by the facts at hand

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Straw Man

A fallacy that occurs when a speaker chooses a deliberately poor or oversimplified example in order to ridicule and refute an idea.

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False Dilemma (Either/Or Fallacy)

A fallacy of oversimplification that offers a limited number of options (usually two) when in fact more options are available.

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Non sequitur

a statement that does not follow logically from evidence

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Slippery Slope

a fallacy which assumes that taking a first step will lead to subsequent steps that cannot be prevented

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Bandwagon

a fallacy which assumes that because something is popular, it is therefore good, correct, or desirable.

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Sweeping Generalization (Dicto Simpliciter)

assuming that something true in general is true in every possible case

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Inductive reasoning

reasoning from detailed facts to general principles

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Deductive reasoning

reasoning in which a conclusion is reached by stating a general principle and then applying that principle to a specific case (The sun rises every morning; therefore, the sun will rise on Tuesday morning.)

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Syllogistic reasoning

determining whether a conclusion follows from two statements that are assumed to be true