Fallacies
[this page is under heavy construction]
Logical fallacies are statements which have the look of arguments, but miss the mark by being off-topic, incomplete, or by employing some trick of language. They are categorized at PhilosophyPages this way:
- fallacies of relevance:
- fallacies of presumption:
- fallacies of ambiguity:
- equivocation,
- amphiboly,
- accent,
- composition, and
- division.
-
Accent -
The fallacy of accident / Sweeping generalization / Dicto simpliciter -
Audiatur et altera pars -
Amphiboly
Extended analogy
Anecdotal evidence Anecdote is not the singular of data- Denying the antecedent

- Argumentum ad antiquitatem Appeal to antiquity, tradition

- Argumentum ad verecundiam Appeal to Authority

- Argumentum ad baculum Appeal to force

- Bandwagon

- Petitio principii Begging the question

- Appeal to Belief

- Biased Sample

- Bifurcation

- Burden of Proof Shifting the burden of proof

- Conflating Cause and Effect

- Circulus in demonstrando

- Circumstantial Ad Hominem

- Appeal to Common Practice

- Complex question Fallacy of interrogation / Fallacy of presupposition: ("When did you stop beating your wife?")

- Fallacies of composition

- Converting a conditional

- Appeal to Consequences of a Belief

- Affirming the consequent

- Argumentum ad crumenam Money makes right

- Cum hoc ergo propter hoc With this, therefor because of this

- Division

- Ignoratio elenchi Irrelevant conclusion

- Appeal to Emotion

- Equivocation / Fallacy of four terms

- False Dilemma

- Appeal to Fear

- Appeal to Flattery

- Gambler's Fallacy

- Converse accident Hasty generalization

- Genetic Fallacy

- Guilt By Association

- Ad hoc Argument by explanation or fallback

- Argumentum ad hominem Attack the person

- Argumentum ad Hominem Tu Quoque What of you?

- Argumentum ad ignorantiam Appeal to Ignorance

- Ignoring A Common Cause

- Fallacy of the Undistributed Middle / "A is based on B" fallacies / "...is a type of..." fallacies

- Argumentum ad lazarum Poverty makes right

- Argumentum ad logicam

- Plurium interrogationum / Many questions

- Middle Ground

- Argumentum ad misericordiam

- Misleading Vividness

- The Natural Law fallacy / Appeal to Nature

- Argumentum ad nauseam

- Non causa pro causa

- Non sequitur Does not follow

- Argumentum ad novitatem Appeal to Novelty: Newness makes right

- Argumentum ad numerum

- Appeal to Pity

- Poisoning the Well

- Argumentum ad populum Appeal to Popularity

- Post hoc ergo propter hoc After this, therefor because of this

- Questionable Cause

- Red Herring

- Reification / Hypostatization

- Relativist Fallacy

- Appeal to Ridicule

- The "No True Scotsman..." fallacy

- Slippery Slope

- Special Pleading Double standards

- Appeal to Spite

- Spotlight

- Straw man


Two Wrongs Make A Right

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