9. 4. rather than trying to disprove a remark
about someone's character or circumstances,
one accuses the other of having the same
character or circumstances.
26. Fallacy of Presumption
The fallacies of presumption also fail to
provide adequate reason for believing the
truth of their conclusions. In these
instances, however, the erroneous
reasoning results from an implicit
supposition of some further proposition
whose truth is uncertain or implausible.
Again, we'll consider each of them in turn,
seeking always to identify the unwarranted
assumption upon which it is based.
28. Begging the Questions
⢠Begging the Question is a fallacy in which
the premises include the claim that the
conclusion is true or (directly or indirectly)
assume that the conclusion is true. This sort of
"reasoning" typically has the following form.
1. Premises in which the truth of
the conclusion is claimed or the truth of the
conclusion is assumed (either directly or
indirectly).
2. Claim C (the conclusion) is true.
29. Example:
i. Since I'm not lying, it follows that I'm telling
the truth.
ii. We know that God exists, since the Bible says
God exists. What the Bible says must be true,
since God wrote it and God never lies.
Proof:
Show that in order to believe that the
premises are true we must already agree that
the conclusion is true.
30. Examples of Begging the Question
Bill: "God must exist."
Jill: "How do you know."
Bill: "Because the Bible says so."
Jill: "Why should I believe the Bible?"
Bill: "Because the Bible was written by
God."
⢠"If such actions were not illegal, then
they would not be prohibited by the
law."
⢠"The belief in God is universal. After all,
everyone believes in God."
32. The complex question fallacy is
committed when a question is asked :
(a) that rests on a questionable
assumption
(b) to which all answers appear to
endorse that assumption.
33. Two or more questions are asked, but they
are disguised as one.
No matter what your answer to the second
question, you will be forced to have the
same answer to the first.
35. Where did you hide
the wine that you
stole from my client
after your drunken
party?
SOMEWHERE NOWHERE
So, you
stole it!
So, you
drank it
all!
36. Are you going to
admit that youâre
wrong?
YES NO
So,
admitting
that
youâre
guilty!
Accepting
guilty but
not
admitting
it!
37. Black or White Fallacy
Fallacy of False Dichotomy
Or
âFalse Dilemmaâ
38. ⢠Only two alternative states are presented,
when in fact more possibilities exist.
⢠A spectrum of possible choices exists between
two extremes.
Examples:
âEither youâre with God, or against Him.â
âI thought you were a good person, but you
werenât at church today.â
39. ⢠Exception:
âThere may be cases when the number of options
really is limited.
Ex.: âIf an ice cream man just has chocolate and
vanilla left, it would be a waste of time insisting
he has mint chocolate chip.â
âIt is also not a fallacy if other options exist, but
you are not offering other options as a possibility.
Ex.: Mom: âBilly, itâs time for bed.â
Billy: âCan I stay up and watch a movie?â
Mom: âYou can either go to bed or stay up for
another 30 minutes and read.â
40. Non-sequitur Fallacy
â˘Non sequiturs
ďŹ Latin phrase that means âit doesnât followâ
ďŹ literary devices which include the statements,
sayings and conclusions that do not follow the
fundamental principles of logic and reason.
41. Non-sequitur
ďŹ irrelevant reason, invalid inference, non-
support, argument by scenario, a form of false
premise , a form of questionable premise.
ďŹ There is a divide between the premise and the
conclusion, which results in something called
a fallacy.
ďŹ â...giant logical jump that is totally
unreasonable!!!â
42. Example #1:
ďŹ People generally like to walk on the
beach. Beaches have sand. Therefore,
having sand floors in homes would be a
great idea!
43. ⢠Example #2:
ďŹ Buddy Burger has the greatest food in
town. Buddy Burger was voted #1 by the
local paper. Therefore, Phil, the owner of
Buddy Burger, should run for President
of the United States.
44. Example #3:
ďŹ Most cats like milk and some cats
have tails. Therefore, cats hate
dogs.
46. -also known as: fallacy of incomplete
evidence, argument by half-truth
⢠The fallacy of suppressed evidence occurs when
an arguer intentionally omits relevant data. This
is a difficult fallacy to detect because we often
have no way of knowing that we haven't been
told the whole truth.
⢠When only select evidence is presented in order
to persuade the audience to accept a position,
and evidence that would go against the position
is withheld. The stronger the withheld evidence,
the more fallacious the argument.
47. Examples:
⢠Most dogs are friendly and pose no threat
to people who pet them. Therefore, it would
be safe to pet the little dog that is
approaching us now.
⢠That type of car is poorly made; a friend of
mine has one, and it continually gives him
trouble.
⢠My political candidate gives 10% of his
income to the needy, goes to church every
Sunday, and volunteers one day a week at
a homeless shelter. Therefore, he is
honest and morally straight.
48. TIP: IF YOU SUSPECT PEOPLE
ARE ONLY TELLING YOU A
HALF-TRUTH, DONâT BE
AFRAID TO ASK, âIS THERE
ANYTHING YOU ARE NOT
TELLING ME?â
49. Logical Fallacy of Proof by Assertion
/ Proof by Repeated Assertion
Logical Fallacy of Proof by
Assertion / Proof by Repeated
Assertion /Argument by
Repetition / Argumentum Ad
Nauseam / Nagging
50. ARGUMENT BY REPETITION
(argumentum ad nauseam)
(also known as: argument from nagging, proof
by assertion)
⢠Description: Repeating an argument or a
premise over and over again in place of better
supporting evidence.
Logical Form:
X is true. X is true. X is true. X is true. X is true. X
is true... etc.
51. Example #1:
That movie, âKill, Blood, Goreâ deserves the Oscar
for best picture. There are other good movies,
but not like that one. Others may deserve an
honorable mention, but not the Oscar, because
âKill, Blood, Goreâ deserves the Oscar.
Explanation: There are no reasons given for why,
âKill, Blood, Goreâ deserves the Oscar, not even
any opinion shared. All we have is a repeated
claim stated slightly differently each time.
52. Example #2:
Saul: At one time, all humans spoke the same language. Then because
of the Tower of Babel, God got angry and created all the different
languages we have today -- or at least some form of them.
Kevin: I studied linguistics in college, and I can pretty much guarantee
you thatâs not what happened. Besides the short story in the Bible,
what other evidence do you have to support this theory?
Saul: We know, because of the Word of God, that God got angry and
created all the different languages we have today -- or at least some
form of them.
Kevin: You said that already. What other evidence do you have to
support this theory?
Saul: In the Bible it says that all humans once spoke the same
language. Then because of the Tower of Babel, God got angry and
created all the different languages we have today -- or at least some
form of them.
Kevin: (nauseated from the repetition, hurls all over Saulâs slacks)
54. Introduction to Informal Fallacies
⢠A fallacy is an unacceptable argument. If there is no
argument, there is no fallacy.
⢠A formal fallacy is an invalid argument.
⢠An informal fallacy is a common argumentative error.
Often it is a valid argument with a false premise.
⢠The fallacies of ambiguity can be seen as formal
fallacies: there is always a shift in the meaning of a
word or phrase in the argument.
55. Fallacies of Ambiguity
ďArise from the occurrence of some form of ambiguity in
either the premises or the conclusion ( or both ). When the
conclusion of an argument depends on a shift in meaning
of an ambiguous word or phrase or on the wrong
interpretation of an ambiguous statement, the argument
commits a fallacy of ambiguity
ď These fallacies occur when one word in an argument may
be taken to have two or more distinct meanings.
ď Fallacies of Ambiguity are of three types:
56. ⢠Equivocation ("to call by the same
name") is classified as an informal logical
fallacy. It is the misleading use of a term
with more than one meaning or sense (by
glossing over which meaning is intended
at a particular time). It generally occurs
with polysemic words (words with
multiple meanings).
Equivocation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equivocation
57. Equivocation
⢠The same word is used with
two different meanings.
⢠The term equivocation comes
from the Latin
terms equi (equal)
and vox (voice) - and means
"with equal voice". When a
term is used univocally in an
argument, it always has the
same meaning, but when it is
used equivocally, more than
one meaning is given equal
voice.
58. ⢠As a logical fallacy it is the use of a term more than once
in a syllogism but giving the term a different meaning
each time and as such it is a type of the fallacy of four
terms.
Equivocation
59. ⢠The fallacy of equivocation is when a key term in
the argument isn't used with a consistent meaning
through out the premises and conclusion. That is,
the meaning changes from one premise to another
or from the premises to the conclusion.
60. Explanation:
A single term is used with two or more meanings in
the same argument. The basic form of this fallacy is:
a. Premise1: [statement using term X in sense 1]
b.Premise2: [statement using term X in sense 2] AND/OR
c. Conclusion: [statement using term X in sense 2]
61. Examples
1.It is well known that the average family has 2.5
children (premise #1). Well, Jane's family is very
average (premise #2), so they must have 2.5
children (conclusion).
⢠The problem here is that the key term average is used in
more than one sense. With the premise, the term is used in
the sense of statistical averages. But the second premise
switches to another sense of average, this time
meaning not unusual. By equating the two, the absurd
conclusion of a family having fractional children is
reached.
62. Examples
2. It is wrong to kill innocent human beings.
(premise #1) Fetuses are innocent human beings.
(premise #2) Therefore, it is wrong to kill fetuses.
(conclusion)
⢠What the first premise meant is a human being who is capable of moral
choices, but who has not in fact chosen any immoral acts. In the second
premise, what is meant has to be more along the lines of a human being
who is not capable of any moral choices in the first place.
⢠However, if it is argued that the exact same sense is meant in both
instances of innocent human being, then the argument is guilty of the
fallacy of begging the question, and so it is still invalid.
63. Examples
3. The end justifies the means.
Death is the end of life.
Therefore, oneâs death justifies the means of life.
⢠Here the word âendâ is used in two ways: (1) as a
goal and (2) as the last event.
⢠In the premise "energy" is being used in the general
scientific sense which refers to a closed system (i.e., the
universe). In the conclusion, "energy" is used in the natural
resources sense (i.e., oil and coal).
4. Scientists say that energy can neither be created or
destroyed, therefore it's impossible for there to be an
energy crisis.
64. Examples
5. Only man is logical.
No woman is a man.
Therefore, no woman is logical.
⢠"Man" in the first sentence really means "mankind,"
"humankind," "homo sapiens". "Man" in the second
sentence means "maleness". The syllogism appears to be
valid, but in fact is fallacious because of the subtle shift
in
65. Additional Examples
1. Criminal actions are illegal, and all murder trials are criminal
actions, thus all murder trials are illegal.
2. The sign said "fine for parking here", and since it was fine, I
parked there.
3. Sure philosophy helps you argue better, but do we really need to
encourage people to argue? There's enough hostility in this
world.
4. Donât fall in love because everything that falls breaks.
5. We shouldnât hire Peter, because our company has a policy
against hiring drug users, and I saw Peter take aspirin, which is a
drug
6. The apostles were twelve. Matthew was an apostle. Hence,
Matthew was twelve.
66. Fallacy of Accent or Prosody
⢠The fallacy of accent (also referred to as accentus, from its
latin denomination, and misleading accent) is a specific type
of ambiguity that arises when the meaning of a sentence is
changed by placing an unusual prosodic stress (emphasis on a
word), or when, in a written passage, it's left unclear which
word the emphasis was supposed to fall on. â Wikipedia.com
⢠Accent refers to the stress placed upon a word in a sentence or
a syllable in a word. In Greek, this was very important because
a written word with one spelling could have more than one
pronunciation and meaning, thus creating multiple words. They
would be homographs (written the same), but not homophones
(sound the same). An example in English would be the words
invalid (someone who is ill) and invalid (as with a faulty
argument). The two are spelled the same and their meaning is
dependent upon how they are pronounced.
67. Fallacy of Accent or Prosody
. Arguments based on unusual stress
âIf words in a common claim are given an
unusual stress, the meaning can shift. If I
argue, âThe commandment says âThou shall
not steal,â so itâs okay for me to pilferâ I
have committed the fallacy of accent.
69. Examples
⢠I didn't take the test yesterday. (Somebody else did.)
I didn't take the test yesterday. (I did not take it.)
I didn't take the test yesterday. (I did something else with
it.)
I didn't take the test yesterday. (I took a different one.)
I didn't take the test yesterday. (I took something else.)
I didn't take the test yesterday. (I took it some other day.)
⢠Steven Wonders is Blind.
Love is Blind.
God is Love
Conlcusion: Steven Wonders is God.
70.
71. Fallacy of Amphiboly
(Fallacy of Syntactic Ambiguity
Just as the meaning of a sentence is determined in part by
where one places the accent or by grammatical structure.
When the meaning of the argument is indeterminate because
of the loose or awkward way by which its words are combined.
An amphibologous statement may be true in one interpretation
and false in another. The error is due to lack of verbal clarity
because of a grammatical error.
Premises
Conclusion
Ambiguous idea
is stated
Misinterprets
statement
A missing comma
A dangling modifier
An ambiguous
antecedent of a pronoun
74. 74
⢠From the parts of something onto the
whole.
Logical form :
A is part of B
A has property X
Therefore, B Has Property X
Fallacy of Composition
75. 75
1. Each player on this basketball team is an
excellent athlete.
Therefore, the team as a whole is excellent.
2. Salt is composed of sodium and chlorine, both
of which are deadly poisons.
Therefore, the salt is a deadly poison.
Examples:
76. 76
⢠From whole to parts.
Logical Form
A is part of B
B has property X
Therefore, A has property X
Fallacy of Division
77. 77
1. Salt is not poisonous.
Therefore, its component elements, sodium and
chlorine, are not poisonous.
2. Stanley Steamers have almost disappeared. This
car is a Stanley Steamer.
Therefore, this car has almost disappeared.
Examples: