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Beware of bad reasoning!. Nonrepresentative Examples. False Comparisons. arguing that two instances are comparable(when in fact they may not be), so that what is true for one is likely to be true for another. False Cause. arguing that one event has caused another without
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False Comparisons • arguing that two instances are comparable(when in fact they may not be), so that what is true for one is likely to be true for another.
False Cause • arguing that one event has caused another without • Explaining the link between cause and effect • Supporting the link with credible evidence • Show a correlation between cause and effect
Post Hoc Fallacy • Avoid committing post hoc fallacy that mistakes chronology for cause. • Watch out for reversed causality by mistaking the effect for the cause.
Ad Populum Fallacy • (aka, bandwagon): assuming truth based on popular opinion.
Straw Person Fallacy • substitutinga weaker claim that is easier to rebut for a real counterargument. Picking some little thing mentioned rather than the key arguments.
Slippery Slope Fallacy • believingthat one event or policy will tip us over an edge into a huge disaster
False Dilemma • arguingthat only two solutions are possible, and that only one of those choices (the speaker’s solution) is correct.
Appeal to Tradition • arguingthat an idea or policy is good because people have accepted or followed it for a long time.