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Fallacies 101 Activity 3.13 Test – Lesson 48 OBJECTIVES Identify fallacious logic, appeals, and rhetoric in sample texts.
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Make flashcards!
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Fallacy: a mistaken belief or a false or misleading statement based on unsound evidence
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I had been doing pretty poorly this season. Then my girlfriend gave me this neon laces for my spikes and I won my next three races. Those laces must be good luck...if I keep on wearing them I can't help but win! Joan is scratched by a cat while visiting her friend. Two days later she comes down with a fever. Joan concludes that the cat's scratch must be the cause of her illness. A Banana In Your Ear
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Luke didn't want to eat his sheep's brains with chopped liver and brussel sprouts, but his father told him to think about the poor, starving children in a third world country who weren't fortunate enough to have any food at all.
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Harold, Call me! Harold, Call me!
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Don't Wake Up in a Roadside Ditch! Don't Wake Up in a Roadside Ditch!
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Go back to the selections in Unit Three. Find examples of these fallacies in any of the following selections: Page 192 “Facebook Photos Sting…” Page 197 “Abolish High School Football” Page 202 “Facing Consequences at Eden Prairie High” Page 214 “Why I Hate Cell Phones” Be prepared to share your examples with the class.
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Monday (periods 2 and 6); Tuesday (periods 1, 3, 4, and 7) Modifiers Definitions of bias, slanters, and fallacies Examples of bias, slanters, and fallacies Read an editorial and determine the claim, evidence, bias, slanter, fallacy
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