Ad Hominem
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Description: Attacking the person making the argument rather than the argument itself.
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Example: “You can’t trust her opinion on climate change; she’s not even a scientist.”
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Straw Man
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Description: Misrepresenting or oversimplifying someone’s argument to make it easier to attack.
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Example: “He wants to reduce military spending, so he must not care about our national security.”
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False Dilemma (Black-and-White Thinking)
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Description: Presenting only two options when more options exist.
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Example: “You’re either with us or against us.”
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Appeal to Authority
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Description: Relying on the opinion of an authority figure, even if they’re not an expert in the relevant field.
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Example: “This diet must work because a celebrity endorses it.”
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Slippery Slope
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Description: Arguing that a small first step will lead to a chain of events resulting in something significant and undesirable.
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Example: “If we allow this law, next thing you know, we’ll lose all our freedoms.”
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Hasty Generalization
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Description: Making a broad conclusion based on insufficient evidence.
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Example: “I met two rude tourists from that country, so everyone from there must be rude.”
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Circular Reasoning (Begging the Question)
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Description: When the argument’s conclusion is used as a premise.
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Example: “I’m trustworthy because I always tell the truth.”
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Appeal to Emotion
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Description: Using emotions rather than logic to persuade.
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Example: “Think of the children! We have to pass this law.”
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Red Herring
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Description: Introducing an irrelevant topic to divert attention from the original issue.
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Example: “Why worry about pollution when there are so many people who are unemployed?”
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Bandwagon (Appeal to Popularity)
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Description: Arguing that something is true or right because many people believe it or do it.
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Example: “Everyone uses this app, so it must be the best choice.”
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Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc (False Cause)
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Description: Assuming that because one event followed another, it was caused by it.
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Example: “I started drinking more water, and now I feel better, so the water must be why.”
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Appeal to Ignorance
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Description: Arguing that something is true because it hasn’t been proven false.
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Example: “No one has proven aliens don’t exist, so they must be real.”
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False Equivalence
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Description: Making two things appear similar when they are not.
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Example: “Taking care of a pet is just like raising a child.”
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Anecdotal Evidence
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Description: Using personal experience or an isolated example instead of sound reasoning or more comprehensive evidence.
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Example: “My grandfather smoked all his life and lived to 90, so smoking isn’t harmful.”
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Tu Quoque (Appeal to Hypocrisy)
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Description: Discrediting someone’s argument because their behavior doesn’t align with it.
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Example: “How can you advise me on being eco-friendly when you drive a car?”
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No True Scotsman
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Description: Changing the definition of a group to exclude counterexamples.
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Example: “No true environmentalist would ever drive a car.”
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Appeal to Tradition
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Description: Arguing something is better or correct because it’s traditional or “always been done this way.”
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Example: “We’ve always used this system, so it must be the best option.”
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Composition/Division Fallacy
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Description: Assuming what’s true of a part is true of the whole (composition) or vice versa (division).
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Example (Composition): “All the players on the team are talented, so the team must be great.”
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Example (Division): “The team is the best in the league, so each player must be amazing.”
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Loaded Question
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Description: Asking a question that assumes something unproven or controversial.
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Example: “When did you decide to stop wasting company time?”
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The Fallacy Fallacy
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Description: Assuming that because an argument contains a fallacy, its conclusion is automatically false.
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Example: “His argument has a hasty generalization, so he must be completely wrong.”
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