Fallacy Flashcards

1
Q

Fallacy

A

A commonly used, psychologically convincing but unreliable, pattern of reasoning.

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2
Q

Fallacy of Appeal

A

An unreasonable appeal to an external factor, such as emotion or popularity.

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3
Q

Appeal to Authority

A

Relying upon the view of apparent (as opposed to genuine) authorities to settle the truth of a statement or argument.

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4
Q

Appeal to Popularity

A

Arguing that a claim must be true because lots of people believe it.

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5
Q

Appeals to Tradition

A

Like appeals to popularity, except the appeal is to how long something has been believed, rather than to the number of people who have believed it.

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6
Q

Appeal to Ignorance

A

The arguer asserts that a claim must be true because no one has proven it false, or that a claim must be false because no one has proven it to be true.

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7
Q

Appeal to Emotion

A

An arguer attempts to evoke feelings of pity or compassion, when such feelings are not logically relevant to the arguer’s conclusion.

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8
Q

Appeal to Consequences

A

An argument is considered good if good consequences will follow from the conclusion; similarly an argument is bad if undesirable consequences follow.

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9
Q

Formal Fallacy

A

An argument which is bad through its form rather than content.

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10
Q

Affirming the Consequent

A

If P then Q. But Q, therefore P.

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11
Q

Denying the Antecedent

A

If P then Q. But not P, therefore not Q.

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12
Q

Exclusive Fallacy

A

Either P or Q. But P, therefore not Q.

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13
Q

Negative Fallacy

A

Deducing a negative conclusion from only positive premises; or, drawing a positive conclusion from only negative premises.

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14
Q

Fallacy of Relevance

A

a premise or sub-argument that appears to offer support, but which is, in principle, irrelevant to the conclusion.

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15
Q

The Hypocrisy Fallacy

A

Rejecting an argument because the person advancing it fails to practice what he or she preaches.

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16
Q

The Red Herring Fallacy

A

An arguer tries to sidetrack their audience by raising an irrelevant issue and then claims that the original issue has effectively been settled by the irrelevant diversion.

17
Q

The Strawman Fallacy

A

Someone distorts or caricatures an opponent’s arguments or views, and then attacks the weakened version rather than the real argument.

18
Q

The Ad Hominem or ‘At the Person’ Fallacy

A

Rejecting someone’s argument by attacking the person rather than evaluating their argument on its merits.

19
Q

The Fallacy of Equivocation

A

A key word is used in two or more senses in the same argument and the apparent success of the argument depends on the shift in meaning.

20
Q

Fallacy of Unacceptable Premise

A

A premise, or sub-argument, which is weak but psychologically compelling - that is, it appears to provide support for the conclusion, but does not.

21
Q

Begging the Question

A

Stating or assuming as a premise the very thing you are trying to conclude.

22
Q

False Dilemma or False Dichotomy

A

Presenting two options and assuming that exactly one of them may be true, never both, and that there are no other possible options.

23
Q

Decision Point Fallacy or the Sorites Paradox

A

Claiming that because we cannot identify a precise cut-off or decision point, we cannot distinguish between correct and incorrect uses of a term.

24
Q

The Slippery Slope Fallacy

A

Arguers say that an innocent-looking first step should not be taken because once taken, it will impossible not to take the next, and the next, and so on, until you end up in a position you don’t want to be in.

25
Q

Hasty Generalisations

A

Arguer draws a general conclusion from a sample that is biased or too small.

26
Q

Faulty Analogies

A

An analogy depends upon a comparison between things that are not actually similar in relevant respects, or which also have important relevant differences.

27
Q

The Fallacy Fallacy

A

The fallacy of inferring that merely because an argument contains a fallacy, its conclusion must be false.

28
Q

Sunk Cost Fallacy

A

Taking into account the amount of time, effort, or money already spent on a task or goal when deciding whether to continue with it.

29
Q

Gambler’s Fallacy

A

Taking past results of random events into account when predicting future events. In particular, assuming that recent events are less likely to reoccur.

30
Q

Special Pleading

A

Claiming that the current case is an exception to a generally accepted rule, without providing relevant justification.

31
Q

No True Scotsman

A

Exceptions and counter-examples are excluded from a claim by continually shifting the relevant criteria until only the desired class can satisfy them.

32
Q

Hindsight Bias

A

An overestimation of the significance of key events that leads to an overconfidence that a past outcome was both certain and easy to predict.

33
Q

Causal Fallacy

A

A fallacy based on the gap between correlation and causation.

34
Q

The Correlation Fallacy

A

Two events seem to always occur together, one preceding the other. Therefore, the first event causes the second.

35
Q

Single Cause Fallacy

A

Assuming there is a single cause for an event when it is actually caused by several different factors, none of which were sufficient.

36
Q

Over-determination Fallacy

A

Assuming there is a single cause for an event when it is actually caused by several different factors, any of which would have been sufficient.

37
Q

The Conjunction Fallacy

A

We regard more specific descriptions as more likely, even though every added detail increases the chance of being wrong.

38
Q

The Whether Fallacy

A

Conflating the accuracy of correcting identifying a type of thing with the accuracy of correctly identifying whether an object is that type of thing.

39
Q

The Predictive Fallacy

A

Reasoning backwards from predictions to patterns.