Logical Fallacies
Ad Hominem | Attacking the person making the argument, rather than addressing the argument the person is making |
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Strawman | Intentionally misrepresenting the other side's argument to make it easier to defeat instead of addressing the other side's actual argument |
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Slippery Slope | one event will lead to a series of events and eventually will lead to something very bad |
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Red Herring | Distracting from the real issue with an irrelevant point or piece of information |
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Hasty Generalization | Making a claim or drawing a conclusion without having enough information |
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Ad Populum | The argument that because something is popular it is good or the truth |
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Appeal to Emotion | Appealing only to the audience’s emotions as the main premise for the argument |
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False Analogy | Attempting to compare two things that are too dissimilar in nature as the basis of your point. |
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False Dichotomy | Leading the audience to believe there are only two choices - either this or that. |
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Post Hoc | The assumption that because B came after A, A must have caused B; hastily drawing a casual conclusion. |
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Band Wagon | Suggesting that a new idea is best because of its popularity, but without regard to its validity. |
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Begging the Question | Asking the audience to believe a reason without offering evidence to support it. |
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Cherry Picking | Intentionally omitting or ignoring relevant information to make your argument stronger. |
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Appeal to Authority | Using a ‘big name’ to persuade the audience to accept your beliefs, even though they are not an authority on the issue. |