1 of 3

Slide Notes

This chapter take readers through some exercises in discovering more common fallacies. When ‘s readers encounter and try to apply the fallacy, they finding hints and developing good fallacy-dectation habits. Then it’s more easy to find fallacies.
There are too many examples in this chapter so I can’t list them.
But from the examples, there’re some points we need to pay attention about.
DownloadGo Live

Discovering other common reasoning fallacies

Published on Jan 01, 2016

No Description

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Discovering other common reasoning fallacies

This chapter take readers through some exercises in discovering more common fallacies. When ‘s readers encounter and try to apply the fallacy, they finding hints and developing good fallacy-dectation habits. Then it’s more easy to find fallacies.
There are too many examples in this chapter so I can’t list them.
But from the examples, there’re some points we need to pay attention about.

Fallacy1: Equivocation: A key word or phrase is used with two or more meanings in an argument such that the argument fails to make sense once the shifts in meaning are recognized.

This chapter take readers through some exercises in discovering more common fallacies. When ‘s readers encounter and try to apply the fallacy, they finding hints and developing good fallacy-dectation habits. Then it’s more easy to find fallacies.
There are too many examples in this chapter so I can’t list them.
But from the examples, there’re some points we need to pay attention about.

Discovering other common reasoning fallacies

This chapter take readers through some exercises in discovering more common fallacies. When ‘s readers encounter and try to apply the fallacy, they finding hints and developing good fallacy-dectation habits. Then it’s more easy to find fallacies.
There are too many examples in this chapter so I can’t list them.
But from the examples, there’re some points we need to pay attention about.