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- Logical Fallacies
-
- AUTHOR'S NOTE:
- These are the basic logical fallacies, informal and formal. They are
- drawn from several sources. The informal fallacies are more likely
- to be useful, especially when you are debating with someone else.
- If you learn the fallacies and become fluent in them you will be
- able to quickly spot the use of logical fallacies in someone elseUs
- reasoning, or even your own! Note: A fallacy is a deceptive, false,
- or misleading argument, notion, belief, etc.
-
- The fallacies listed here are from a hypercard shareware stack that
- I have put together.
-
- The basic format of this list (and of the stack), is (1) the formal name
- of the fallacy (usually its Latin name), followed by (2) a description of
- the fallacy.
-
- John W. Eshleman, Ed.D.
- 143 Blakeford Dr.
- Dublin, OH 43017
-
- CIS: 73767,1466
-
- ________________________________________________
-
- UPLOADER'S NOTE:
- The temptation among all of us is to chalk up the value of the enclosed
- fallacies of logic, to purely academic exercises. However, to do so would
- be a grievous error.
-
- Logic is not just the "rules" of validity and soundness, but it is also
- the straightest and most conducive path to practical communication.
- Meaning, the enclosed should *not* be exclusively viewed as a weapon
- against your dialogue opponent, but rather also as a tool for the
- examination of your own assertions.
-
- When I first started in Philosophy my Professor of Logic said to our
- class --
-
- "Learn the fallacies and learn them well. So well that immediately
- when you hear one, a red flag goes up, sirens sound, and lights
- flash. Then stop. Examine what is being said, and you will know
- how to reply. And if it is you saying it, ask yourself if you must
- say it that way. And still further yet, if your answer is in the
- affirmative, stop your argument there. For the argument is yet to be
- conceived that is more important than honesty and integrity."
-
- Words to live by.
-
- Kevin W. Walker, B.A.(Phil.),
- M.A. Candidate
- CPO 4492
- Wheaton College Graduate School
- Wheaton, IL 60187
-
- CI$: 72070,3436
- GEnie: K.WALKER12
-
-
-
- _______________________________________________
-
- LIST OF LOGICAL FALLACIES:
-
- ACCENTUS
-
- Description: A Fallacy of Ambiguity, where the ambiguity arises from
- the emphasis (accent) placed on a word or phrase.
-
-
- AFFIRMATION OF THE CONSEQUENT
-
- Description: An argument from the truth of a hypothetical statement,
- and the truth of the consequent to the truth of the antecedent. In
- the syllogism below, P is the antecedent and Q is the consequent:
-
- P implies Q
- Q is true <-- Affirming the consequent
- ______________
- Therefore: P is true
-
-
- AMBIGUITY
-
- Description: An argument in the course of which at least one term is
- used in different senses. Also known as equivocation. There are
- several types of "fallacies of ambiguity," including REIFICATION,
- EQUIVOCATION, AMPHIBOLY, COMPOSITION, DIVISION, and
- ACCENTUS.
-
-
- AMPHIBOLY
-
- Description: A type of Fallacy of Ambiguity where the ambiguity
- involved is of an "amphibolous" (equivocal, uncertain) nature.
- Amphiboly is a syntactic error. The fallacy is caused by faulty
- sentence structure, and can result in a meaning not intended by
- the author. "The department store now has pants for men with
- 32 waists." (How many waists do you have? I have only one!)
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD ANTIQUITAM
-
- Description: A fallacy of asserting that something is right or good
- simply because it is old; that is, because "that's the way it's always
- been."
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD BACULUM
-
- Description: An argument that resorts to the threat of force to cause
- the acceptance of the conclusion. Ad baculum arguments also
- include threats of fear to cause acceptance (e.g., "Do this or you'll
- go to Hades when you die!" or "Might makes right.").
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD CRUMENAM
-
- Description: Fallacy of believing that money is a criterion of
- correctness; that those with more money are more likely to be
- right.
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD HOMINEM
-
- Description: An argument that attempts to disprove the truth of what
- is asserted by attacking the speaker rather than the speaker's
- argument. Another way of putting it: Fallacy where you attack
- someone's character instead of dealing with salient issues. There
- are two basic types of ad hominem arguments: (1) abusive, and
- (2) circumstantial.
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD IGNORANTIAM
-
- Description: An argument that a proposition is true because it has
- not been shown to be false, or vice versa. Ad ignorantium arguments
- are also known as "appeals to ignorance." This fallacy has two forms:
-
- 1. P is true, because it has not been proven false.
- 2. P is false, because it has not been proven true.
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD LAZARUM
-
- Description: A fallacy of assuming that because someone is poor he
- or she is sounder or more virtuous than one who is wealthier. This
- fallacy is the opposite of the informal fallacy "argumentum ad
- crumenam."
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD MISERICORDIAM
-
- Description: An argument that appeals to pity for the sake of getting
- a conclusion accepted.
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD NAUSEUM
-
- Description: The incorrect belief that an assertion is more likely to
- be true the more often it is heard. An "argumentum ad nauseum"
- is one that employs constant repitition in asserting a truth.
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD NOVITAM
-
- Description: A fallacy of asserting that something is more correct
- simply because it is new or newer than something else. Or that
- something is better because it is newer. This type of fallacy is the
- opposite of the "argumentum ad antiquitam" fallacy.
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD NUMERAM
-
- Description: A fallacy that asserts that the more people who support
- or believe a proposition then the more likely that that proposition is correct; it equates mass support with correctness.
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD POPULUM
-
- Description: An argument that appeals to the beliefs of the multitude
- (i.e., the "populace"). Another way of putting it: Speaker deals
- with passions of audience rather than with salient issues. This
- fallacy is also known as "Appeal to Tradition" Ad populum arguments
- often occur in (1) propaganda, (2) demagoguery, and (3) advertising.
-
-
- ARGUMENTUM AD VERECUNDIAM
-
- Description: An argument in which an authority is appealed to on
- matters outside his/her field of authority. "Ad verecundiam" also
- refers to a fallacy of simply resorting to appeals to authority.
-
-
- BEGGING THE QUESTION (CIRCULAR REASONING)
-
- Description: An argument that assumes as part of its premises the
- very conclusion that is supposed to be true. Another way of saying
- this is: Fallacy of assuming at the onset of an argument the very point
- you are trying to prove. The fallacy is also sometimes referred to
- as "Circulus in Probando." This Fallacy is also known by the Latin
- "PETITIO PRINCIPII".
-
-
- BIFURCATION
-
- Description: Also referred to as the "black and white" fallacy,
- bifurcation is the presentation of a situation or condition with
- only two alternatives, whereas in fact other alternatives exist or
- can exist.
-
-
- COMPOSITION
-
- Description: An argument in which one assumes that a whole has
- a property solely because its various parts have that property.
- Composition is a type of Fallacy of Ambiguity.
-
-
- CONVERTING A CONDITIONAL
-
- Description: If P then Q, therefore, if Q then P.
-
-
- CUM HOC ERGO PROPTER HOC
-
- Description: A fallacy of correlation that links events because they
- occur simultaneously; one asserts that because two events occur
- together they are causally related, and leaves no room for other
- factors that may be the cause(s) of the events. This fallacy is similar
- to the "post hoc" fallacy.
-
-
- DENIAL OF THE ANTECEDENT
-
- Description: An argument in which one infers the falsity of the
- consequent from the truth of a hypothetical proposition, and the
- falsity of its antecedent.
-
- P implies Q
- Not-P
- ____________
- Therefore: Not-Q
-
-
- DIVISION
-
- Description: An argument in which one assumes that various parts
- have a property solely because the whole has that same property.
- Division is a type of Fallacy of Ambiguity.
-
-
- EQUIVOCATION
-
- Description: An argument in which an equivocal expression is used in
- one sense in one premise and in a different sense in another premise,
- or in the conclusion. Equivocal means (1) of uncertain significance;
- not determined, and (2) having different meanings equally possible.
- Equivocation is a type of Fallacy of Ambiguity. The opposite of
- equivocation is "unovocation," in which a word always carries the
- same meaning through a given context.
-
-
- FALLACY OF INTERROGATION
-
- Description: The question asked has a presuppostion which the
- answerer may wish to deny, but which he/she would be accepting
- if he/she gave anything that would count as an answer. Any answer
- to the question "Why does such-and-such happen?" presupposes that
- such-and-such does indeed happen.
-
-
- FALSE ANALOGY
-
- Description: An analogy is a partial similarity between the like features
- of two things or events on which a comparison can be made. A
- false analogy involves comparing two things that are NOT similar.
- Note that the two things may be similar in superficial ways, but
- not with respect to what is being argued.
-
-
- HASTY GENERALIZATION (SECUNDUM QUID)
-
- Description: An argument in which a proposition is used as a
- premise without attention given to some obvious condition that
- would affect the proposition's application. This fallacy is also known
- as the "hasty generalization." It is a fallacy that takes evidence
- from several, possibly unrepresentative, cases to a general rule;
- generalizing from few to many. Note the relation to statistics: Much
- of statistics concerns whether or not a sample is representative of a
- larger population. The larger the sample size, the better the
- representativeness. Note also that the opposite of a hasty generalization
- is a sweeping generalization.
-
-
- IGNORATIO ELENCHI
-
- Description: An argument that is supposed to prove one proposition
- but succeeds only in proving a different one. Ignoratio elenchi stands
- for "pure and simple irrelevance."
-
-
- ILLICIT PROCESS
-
- Description: A syllogistic argument in which a term is distributed in
- the conclusion, but not in the premises. One of the rules for a valid
- categorical syllogism is that if either term is distributed in the
- conclusion, then it must be distributed in the premises. There are
- two types of Illicit Process: Illicit Process of the Major Term and
- Illicit Process of the Minor Term.
-
-
- PLURIUM INTERROGATIONUM-MANY QUESTIONS
-
- Description: A demand for a simple answer to a complex question.
-
-
- NON CAUSA PRO CAUSA
-
- Description: An argument to reject a proposition because of the falsity
- of some other proposition that seems to be a consequence of the first,
- but really is not.
-
-
- NON-SEQUITUR
-
- Description: An argument in which the conclusion is not a necessary
- consequence of the premises. Another way of putting this is: A
- conclusion drawn from premises that provide no logical connection
- to it.
-
-
- PETITIO PRINCIPII
-
- Description: Same as "Begging the Question" The argument assumes
- its conclusion is true but DOES NOT SHOW it to be true. Petitio principii
- has two forms:
-
- 1. P is true, because P is true.
- 2. P is true, because A is true. And A is true because B is true.
- And B is true because P is true.
-
-
- POST HOC, ERGO PROPTER HOC
-
- Description: An argument from a premise of the form "A preceded B" to
- a conclusion of the form "A caused B." Simply because one event
- precedes another event in time does not mean that the first event is
- the cause of the second event. This argument resembles a fallacy known
- as a Hasty Generalization.
-
-
- QUATERNIO TERMINORUM
-
- Description: An argument of the syllogistic form in which there occur
- four or more terms. In a standard categorical syllogism there are
- only three terms: a subject, a predicate, and a middle term.
-
-
- RED HERRING
-
- Description: A fallacy when irrelevant material is introduced to the
- issue being discussed, such that everyone's attention is diverted
- away from the points being made, and toward a different conclusion.
- It is not logically valid to divert a chain of reasoning with
- extraneous points.
-
-
- REIFICATION
-
- Description: To reify something is to convert an abstract concept into
- a concrete thing. Reification is a Fallacy of Ambiguity. Reification is
- also sometimes known as a fallacy of "hypostatization".
-
-
- SHIFTING THE BURDEN OF PROOF
-
- Description: The burden of proof is always on the person making
- the assertion or proposition. Shifting the burden of proof, a special
- case of "argumentum ad ignorantium," is a fallacy of putting the
- burden of proof on the person who denies or questions the assertion
- being made. The source of the fallacy is the assumption that something
- is true unless proven otherwise.
-
-
- SPECIAL PLEADING
-
- Description: Special pleading is a logical fallacy wherein a double
- standard is employed by the person making the assertion.
- Special pleading typically happens when one insists upon less
- strict treatment for the argument he/she is making than he or
- she would make when evaluating someone else's arguments.
-
-
- STRAW MAN
-
- Description: It is a fallacy to misrepresent someone else's position
- for the purposes of more easily attacking it, then to knock down
- that misrepresented position, and then to conclude that the
- original position has been demolished. It is a fallacy because it
- fails to deal with the actual arguments that one has made.
-
-
- SWEEPING GENERALIZATION
-
- Description: Also known by the Latin term "DICTO SIMPLICITER",
- a Sweeping Generalization occurs when a general rule is applied to
- a particular situation in which the features of that particular
- situation render the rule inapplicable. A sweeping generalization
- is the opposite of a hasty generalization.
-
-
- TWO WRONGS MAKE A RIGHT (TU QUOQUE)
-
- Description: Two wrongs never add up to a right; you cannot right
- a wrong by applying yet another wrong. Such a fallacy is a
- misplaced appeal to consistency. It is a fallacy because it makes
- no attempt to deal with the subject under discussion.
-
-
- UNDISTRIBUTED MIDDLE
-
- Description: A syllogistic argument in which the middle term of
- a categorical syllogism is not distributed in at least one of the
- premises.
-
- ____________________________________
- END OF FILE
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