Critical thinking writing assignment
Fallacies A fallacy is an error in reasoning. The kinds of fallacies we are currently interested in are called informal fallacies. These are fallacious arguments which are psychologically compelling, but logically empty. Fallacies are essentially bad inferences in arguments. Certain information is used to support an idea (premises supporting a conclusion in an argument), but the connection between that information and the idea it is intended to support is either not sufficient or completely absent. Psychologically, however, we are inclined to think that the inference is an acceptable one. These errors rest on ambiguous language, unwarranted assumptions, or irrelevant premises.
1. Equivocation: A key term changes its meaning during the argument, allowing one to conclude anything based on slipping definitions.
a. We have a right to determine the conditions of our own death. Therefore, voluntary active euthanasia is legal.
b. Man is a rational animal; no woman is a man; therefore, no woman is rational. 2. Division: A bad inference from the characteristics of a whole group to its individual
parts. a. The team is the best in the league. Therefore, the players are the best players in
the league. 3. Composition: A bad inference from the characteristics of the individual parts to the whole
group. a. You can’t see the atoms that make up my body. I am, therefore, quite invisible.
4. Ad Hominem: When one attacks the person who made an argument in an effort to refute it rather than the argument itself; can be abusive (poison the well) or contextual (hypocrite or stereotype).
a. My opponent claims that we should all vote for him because he’ll save the country, but he can’t even maintain a marriage, so we should not vote for him
b. The defendant has been accused of theft, fraud, and criminal negligence in the past, so he must be guilty this time.
c. Bob says that burning fossil fuels contributes to greenhouse gas buildup in the atmosphere, so it’s wrong to drive. I know he drives everywhere, even down the street, so I’m not buying it.
d. She claimed that we should avoid giving too much power to the state, but she’s a Republican so of course she’d say that.
5. Appeal to force: Use or threat of force/fear/loss/gain to compel without rational support for truth or falsity; one is forced to think of personal stakes instead.
a. It’s not right for us to vote for a tax increase because it would make our revenues less.
Prof. Eckel, U. Toledo, FA17
b. You should stop cheating because you’ll eventually get caught. 6. Appeal to pity: Evoking irrelevant emotions or sympathies for others’ losses or
circumstances rather than reasons for truth or falsity; context matters for relevance. a. Officer, I can’t get a speeding ticket because I can’t afford it and I’m already late
to work. b. If you don’t come to my fundraiser, you will break my heart.
7. Popular appeal: Appeal to popular opinion as source of truth itself; what most people believe is said to be true for that reason; snob appeal is the elitist/niche version, where one is said to be correct because they are not like everyone else.
a. Most consumers choose Bank of America for their personal banking needs. So you should too.
b. Joe the Plumber is the ideal candidate because he’s like everyone else, an average, normal American.
c. Be better than average; be you; be unique. You deserve it because you’re a person of discernment and fine tastes. You deserve a [insert snobbish product here].
8. Appeal to tradition: Claiming that since something has been believed or done in a traditional sense through history that it is true or moral for no other reason.
a. We allowed redrawing of districts since the inception of this country so should continue to allow it.
9. Appeal to ignorance: Claiming that a belief must be true/false because it hasn’t been proven otherwise (false/true); absence of proof is said to be positive proof; shifting the burden of proof as an alternative.
a. There is no evidence of the inexistence of bigfoot, so it is rational to believe in this creature until proven otherwise.
b. Until we’ve ruled out the effect of solar activity on the climate, we should not accept that climate change is due to carbon emissions.
c. You are guilty. There is no evidence of your innocence, and you will be guilty until there is.
10. Hasty generalization: Using too small or biased of a sample group to make an inference about a larger group of which the sample is a part
a. We’ve polled five hundred students on campus this morning about whether the school should have a Chick-fil-A; 74% say yes; 26% say no. A majority of people on campus are for having Chick-fil-A on campus.
11. Straw man: Using a distorted, more imperfect version of an opponent's argument as though it were their own in order to refute it
a. Person A: We should regulate the financial industry more closely because the acts that led to the 07/08 crash are still very possible.
Prof. Eckel, U. Toledo, FA17
Person B: Person A believes that we need more regulations on the financial industry. I think we need less. Person A claims that either we have a massive bureaucracy to regulate the industry so that it can’t operate freely, or there will be a catastrophic financial collapse, which is a fallacy. It doesn’t matter, because if we regulate the industry that much, lenders will not be able to lend and there will be a financial collapse anyway. Less regulation is better.
12. Red herring: Responding to a claim or making a point by taking a tangent away from the original line of reasoning, directing attention away from it to conceal faulty reasoning before returning to the intended conclusion. Associations take the place of reasoning.
a. We cannot provide humanitarian aid to Puerto Rico since they’re debt is too high and it’s not clear how they’ll pay the debts they already had.
b. The candidate for senate shouldn’t be taken seriously. Though they have great ideas, experience in passing laws, and a perfect legislative platform, they look like an eccentric bum and aren’t very compelling in front of a podium. They are neither passionately progressive nor conservative, but a kind of worker who will get overshadowed by Washington's self-interested political games without being on either team.
13. Begging the question: An argument where the conclusion is the same thing as a premise but reworded; accepting the premise is accepting the conclusion.
a. The biologist found that 90% of the trees in the forest had the fungus. The other 10% showed resistance and were healthy. Of the 90% less than half will live to their normal life range. Because of all of this, therefore, one in ten trees did not have the fungus.
b. We cannot allow democracy to fall because it would be unacceptable to fail to maintain political arrangements in which the people hold political power.
14. Inappropriate appeal to authority: Taking an expert in one field to be an expert in a field in which they are not an expert, a halo effect.
a. A new study signed by 1,000 physical scientists has claimed that climate change is not necessarily human-caused. Therefore, there is good reason to think that there is a lack of consensus about climate change being human-induced.
15. False dilemma: When a complex situation is reduced to two oversimplified solutions as either/or; this is an absolutist inflexibility and can be a stacked deck.
a. Either we destroy North Korea or they destroy us. 16. Questionable cause: Assuming, without sufficient evidence, that there is a cause/effect
relation when there is not; post hoc ergo propter hoc (after this therefore because of this). a. We gave the patient the prescribed dosage but were unable to save them. The
illness, therefore, was too much, and they succumbed to it. b. He stopped talking to me after I told him he drinks too much, so obviously he was
offended by what I said and it caused our friendship to collapse.
Prof. Eckel, U. Toledo, FA17
17. Slippery slope: The assumption that if certain actions are permitted, all actions of this type will be permissible, or worse.
a. If we allow gay people to get married then it will become the norm. If gay marriage becomes the norm instead of heterosexual marriage, then there will be nothing stopping people from marrying children or pet turtles. We obviously can’t allow that, so shouldn’t allow gay marriage in the first place.
18. Naturalistic fallacy: Assuming that what is natural is good and unnatural is bad. a. Foods that have been manipulated by humans are less natural than foods we’d
find in the wild. They are less healthy for us for that reason. b. We should legalize marijuana use because it is a more natural substance and a
healthier option compared to cigarettes which are filled with so many different chemicals.
19. Faulty analogy: Making an assertion about something by comparing it to something similar and assuming that the two things must be similar in a further way.
a. I passed the last class I had when I showed up every day, it was in the morning, I studied once a week, I turned in 9/10 of the homework, and the professor was easy to reach. In my current class, the professor is easy to reach, I have turned in 9/10 of the homework, I study once every week, it’s in the morning, and I show up every day. So I will pass this class too.
Prof. Eckel, U. Toledo, FA17