
-- W 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 10 | back 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 | 
| Chapter 10 | |
| Appeal to Bandwagon | This fallacy seeks to persuade by appealing to the wisdom of the momentum of a popular opinion. | 
| Appeal to False Authority | This fallacy seeks to persuade by citing fake, questionable, or inappropriate authority. | 
| Appeal to Fear | This fallacy seeks to persuade by arousing fear that clouds rationality. | 
| Appeal to Pity | This fallacy seeks to persuade by arousing pity. | 
| Circular Reasoning | This fallacy assumes what it is supposed to prove by reasserting the conclusion, sometimes in different words, as though this conclusion needed no supporting reasons. | 
| Fallacy | A fallacy is an invalid, argument that can be deceptive or misleading. | 
| Fallacy of Word Ambiguity | This fallacy seeks to gain an advantage in an argument by using vague undefined words that can be interpreted in more than one way. | 
| Infer | To use imagination and reasoning to fill in missing facts. To connect the dots. | 
| Misleading Euphemisms | This fallacy hides meaning by creating words that make a less acceptable idea seem positive or unrecognizable. | 
| Opinion | Opinion 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 Attack | This fallacy attacks a person’s character without addressing the issue. | 
| Pointing to Another Wrong | This fallacy distracts attention from an admitted wrongdoing by claiming that similar actions went unnoticed and unpunished. | 
| Poisoning the Well | This fallacy seeks to prejudice others against a person, group or idea so that their arguments cannot be heard on their own merits. | 
| Prejudicial Language | This fallacy attempts to persuade through the use of loaded words that convey a bias. | 
| Principal claim and reasons | These 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 Herring | This fallacy distracts attention away from the lack of proof for a claim by raising irrelevant issues. | 
| Straw man | This fallacy misrepresents or caricatures an opponent’s position, then refutes the false replica created. | 
| Thinking | Purposeful mental activity such as reasoning, deciding, judging, believing, supposing, expecting, intending, recalling, remembering, visualizing, imagining, devising, inventing, concentrating, conceiving, considering. | 
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