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Fallacies. Bad arguments are called fallacies. Fallacies tend to exploit common psychological aspects of our mind: many people think that they are good arguments.Fallacies usually follow certain patterns, so there are several categories of common fallacies.You can see fallacies around you all the time once you recognize these patterns..
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1. Fallacies Minds & Machines
3. Truth-Seeking vs Persuading One reason why there are so many fallacies is that many people use arguments to persuade other people, and to win debates, rather than to find the truth.
As someone said: Arguments are to people as what lampposts are for drunks: they are used for support rather than illumination.
There is probably a good evolutionary reason for why people want to persuade, rather than find the truth: it is much easier to persuade, and there are immediate pay-offs to persuading others, while finding the truth is hard, and even if you find it, there may not be an immediate pay-off.
Since we are doing philosophy in this course, our goal of arguments is to find the truth, not to win or persuade.
Accordingly, in this course a good argument is understood as an argument that gets us closer to the truth, i.e. an argument that is sound.
Of course, lawyers, politicians, car sales people, and basically everyone else (!) defines a good argument as one that is persuasive, sound or not.
4. Fallacies of Relevance Fallacies that violate the first criterion of good arguments (the premises should support the conclusion) are fallacies of relevance. In other words, any time the conclusion cannot reasonably be drawn from the premises, we are dealing with a fallacy of relevance.
Ad Hominem
Appeal to Authority
Red Herring
Appeal to Fear, Force, Pity, Vanity, etc.
Appeal to Ignorance
5. Ad Hominem The Ad Hominem Fallacy is committed when someone rejects a belief or argument based on its source. Examples:
Bill Clintons proposal is bad, because he had sex in the White House (abusive ad hominem)
Of course he opposes rent control. He owns two apartment buildings himself! (circumstantial ad hominem)
John Kerry criticizes George Bushs military record? Wait, didnt Kerry get those 3 purple hearts by blowing up some innocent Vietnamese? (inconsistency ad hominem, pseudorefutation or tu quoque)
6. Appeal to Authority Inappropriate Authority:
According to my dad
Einstein said
[something about evolution]
Unidentified Authority:
Studies show
Experts agree
Science says
Appeal to the Masses:
Everybody knows
7. Red Herring Sometimes the premises seem related to the conclusion, but they really arent: you are being led down the wrong path. Example:
I can't believe you thought that latest Disney movie was ok for children to watch. Disney pays 12-year old girls 31 cents an hour to sow their products together.
8. Appeal to Emotions (Fear, Pity, Vanity, etc) Fear:
If you dont believe in God, God sure wont be happy about that!
Pity:
I deserve an A in the class because my mom was really sick and so I couldnt concentrate
Vanity:
Intelligent people like yourself deserve [fill in any product here]
9. Appeal to Ignorance An appeal to ignorance is made when one argues that something is the case since no one has shown that it is not the case:
Smoking is ok, since no one has proven that it is bad for your health.
Our factory output shouldnt be restricted for environmental reasons, since no one has shown that the green house effect really exists.
10. Fallacies of Assumption A fallacy of assumption violates the second criterion of a good argument (the premises should be plausible). Thus, a fallacy of assumption is an argument that makes a dubious assumption.
False Dilemma
Perfectionist Fallacy
Line-Drawing Fallacy
Straw Man
Slippery Slope
Begging the Question
11. False Dilemma An argument assumes a false dilemma when it assumes that one of two cases must be true, where in fact there are other options as well. Examples:
Since youre not a capitalist, you must be a communist!
Youre either with us, or against us.
Are you a Democrat or a Republican?
Nature or nurture?
12. Perfectionist Fallacy The perfectionist fallacy presents us with a kind of all or nothing false dilemma:
We shouldnt give aid to countries where people are starving, because we cant eradicate hunger completely.
Since no one has proven with absolute certainty that God exists, it is just as rational to believe that God does not exist as it is to believe that God does exist.
13. Line-Drawing Fallacy Another kind of false dilemma: Either we can draw a line between two things, or there is no difference between the two at all:
Abortion is murder from the moment of conception, since we cant draw the line before which the fetus is not a person, and after which the fetus is.
14. Straw Man A Straw Man argument attacks something by attacking a helpless caricature of that something: it often distorts the original by exaggeration. Example:
The movement to allow prayer in public school classrooms is a major threat to our freedom. The advocates of prayer in school want to require every school child to participate in a Christian religious program prior to every school day.
15. Slippery Slope A slippery slope fallacy makes a dubious assumption that one thing will lead to another
If the experts decide today that we should have fluorides in our tea, coffee, frozen orange juice, lemonade, and every cell of our bodies, whats next? Tranquilizers to avoid civil disorders? What about birth-control chemicals to be routed to the water in certain ethnic neighborhoods?
16. Begging the Question Circular reasoning:
God exists because the bible says so.
What, why we can trust what the Bible says? Easy, the Bible is the word of God.
Of course my salary is higher than yours, because my work is more important.
Youre asking me why it is more important? Well, my salary is higher, isnt it?
The True Scotsman Fallacy:
All Germans like sauerkraut.
Oh, your brother-in-law is German and he doesnt like sauerkraut? Well, he is not a true German then, is he?
17. Other Fallacies Rhetorical Fallacies
The One Big Ethical Fallacy
18. Rhetorical Fallacies Simply by using certain words to frame an issue, question, or position, you can sway people one way or the other.
Technical Note: Maybe these are not so much fallacies, as they dont constitute any argument, but simply ploys to persuade people.
Examples:
Yay and Boo words
Exaggerating and Minimizing
Proof Surrogates
And many more!!!! Take my Methods of Reasoning course in the spring!
19. Euphemisms and Dysphemisms Are we fighting terrorists or are we helping freedom fighters?
Are you pro-life or pro-choice?
Do you have a rendez-vous in the back of a Limosine or an affair in the back of a Buick?
Feminist or feminazi?
Etc.
20. Hyperbole and Downplayers That was the biggest
ever!!
I was just trying to
So, he got his degree from
, did he?
Etc.
21. Proof Surrogates Obviously,
Clearly
As everyone knows,
Anyone with half a brain would agree that
Etc.
22. And the One Big Ethical Fallacy Ought from Is!
Well, thats how we should behave, because everyone behaves that way!
Subclasses:
Naturalistic Fallacy: Its natural, so its good
Normalistic Fallacy: Its normal, so its good
Traditionalistic Fallacy: Its always been that way, so its good