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Reasoning & Problem Solving Lecture 5b More Fallacies By David Kelsey
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Ad Hominem To commit this fallacy is to think that some consideration about a person refutes the claims that he or she makes. Confusing the person and the claim: –Criticizing the person not the claim itself
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Ad Hominem again A personal attack ad hominem: –claiming that because someone has certain negative features it follows that a claim she makes is false. –Examples Inconsistency ad hominem: –to hold that what someone says is false because it is inconsistent with something else she has said or done. –Examples
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Circumstantial & Positive ad hominem Circumstantial ad hominem: –holding that because a person’s circumstances are a certain way it follows that some claim she makes is false. –Priest example Positive ad hominem: –holding that the claim a person makes follows from some positive consideration about the person. –Einstein example
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Poisoning the Well To poison the well –an in advance ad hominem. –For example, Rumors…
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Genetic Fallacy When one tries to refute a claim based on its origin or history she has committed the genetic fallacy. –Belief in God’s existence –Genetic fallacy vs. Circumstantial ad Hominem
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Straw Man Straw man fallacy: –trying to refute a claim or argument by distorting it or oversimplifying it or misrepresenting it in such a way that it can be easily refuted. –Reconfiguring a claim –Knocking down a straw man –Knocking down a straw man is easy business but knocking down a good argument is not.
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False Dilemma False dilemma –limits considerations to a choice between only two alternatives although other reasonable alternatives are available. –The form of a false dilemma: –Using a false dilemma for the purpose of deception –Example: Prayer in public schools
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Perfectionist fallacy –Rejecting a policy or claim because it isn’t perfect. –A kind of false dilemma –Example: Instant replay
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Line Drawing Fallacy The Line-Drawing fallacy –insisting that a conceptual line must be drawn at a particular point when drawing such a line isn’t necessary. –Examples: Rich Bald Excessive force –Line drawing and Vagueness
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Slippery Slope Slippery Slope: –Claiming that if we let some thing X occur it follows that something else Y will occur, yet there is no reason to think that if X occurs so must Y. –Causation and slippery slope arguments –Example: Hand gun laws
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Misplacing the Burden of Proof Misplacing the burden of proof: –Misplacing the burden of proof on the wrong side of an issue. –The 2 sides of an issue –Example: Should we go to war with Iraq?
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The burden of proof To say the burden of proof rests on a claim: –This just means that if one is to hold this position, then she must support it with argumentation. –Example: Iraq again –Temporal Priority
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Where does the burden lie? Placing the burden –Plausibility: The burden ought to be placed on whichever side of an issue is less plausible. Example: –Affirmative: The burden, in general, ought to be placed on the affirmative side of an issue. Example:
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The burden of proof #3 Special Circumstances: –Under special circumstances the burden of proof is placed on a particular side of an issue. –The court: The defendant is always innocent until proven guilty
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Appeal to ignorance –claiming that we should believe that some claim is true because no one has proved it false. –Example: Ghosts exist
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Begging the Question One begs the question when one of the premises of her argument assumes the truth of the conclusion. Examples: –Abortion –An argument for God’s existence Circular reasoning
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