LCR Informal Fallacy Guide - PPTX - 0
LCR Informal Fallacy Guide - PPTX - 0
LCR Informal Fallacy Guide - PPTX - 0
3. So, all dogs are animals. So, all cats are animals.
For example, it is improper to infer from the fact that in the past
50 instances in which one has flipped a coin it has turned out
heads, that the next instance it will turn out tails.
For example, one could say “you ought to vote for Jim, you
wouldn’t want to get a broken leg.” Here the arguer appeals to
force as a way to convince someone to vote for Jim.
Example:
You should vote for Jim because you wouldn’t want to come home
and find your family murdered.
For example:
You should give me an A on the exam because my dog was sick last week,
my girlfriend dumped me and I lost my job.
Be careful not all arguments that involve pity are such that the conclusion is
merely supported by an appeal to pity. The content of the premises can
evoke pity without it being the case that the arguer has appealed to pity as
the reason to believe the conclusion.
Fallacies of Relevance: Appeal to the People
Bandwagon
You ought to buy coke zero, because everyone is buying it.
Vanity
You ought to buy coke zero, because only the cool people drink it.
Snobbery
You ought to buy coke zero, because only the elite people drink it.
Examples:
Johnny Smith has argued that we should go to war in Korea. But
Johnny is an idiot and a coke addict. So, we should not go to war.
Mary Taylor has argued that we need to raise taxes because it will
help the economy. But Mary is a horrible person. So we should not
raise taxes.
Frank Jones has argued that we should cut welfare programs for the
disabled. But Frank is mentally handicapped. So we should not cut
welfare programs for the disabled.
Argument Against the Person: Circumstantial
Examples:
Peter Smith has argued that we need to cut taxes. But Peter is only
saying that because he is rich and wants to keep more of his money.
So, we should not cut taxes.
Mary Jones has argued that we should go to war in Iraq. But Mary
would benefit from the oil contracts that we would secure were we
to win a war in Iraq. So, we should not go to war in Iraq.
Larry Taylor has argued that evolution has not occurred. But Larry
is only saying that because he is an advocate of creationism.
Argument Against the Person: You Too
Examples:
Smoking is bad for you, because it causes cancer. (said by a person
smoking). Clearly it can’t be that bad for you, since you are
smoking (said by a person listening to the argument of the first
person).
You should really stop polluting in the pond, it is bad for the fish. I
don’t see any reason to stop polluting. Your company is the number
one polluter in the nation.
For example:
Puncturing someone’s skin with a knife is a way of harming them. So,
when surgeons puncture a patients skin they are harming them. Since
harming others is morally wrong, it follows that when surgeons puncture
their patients skin they are doing something that is morally wrong.
In identifying the fallacy of accident one should try to isolate what the
general principle is, and attempt to figure out from their background
knowledge what the proper scope of application is for the general
principle.
If the general principle is being misapplied, then it is likely that accident
is occurring.
Fallacies of Relevance: Straw Man
Examples
Smith has argued that public health care is good for the nation. But
really Smith is just defending that idea of socialism. And since we know
that socialism does not work, we have no reason to choose public health
care.
Jones has argued that we should go to war in Iraq. But really Jones is
just an imperialist out to conquer other nations And since we know that
imperialism is immoral, we have no reason to go to war in Iraq.
Examples:
Johnny comes home every night drunk and bleeding. He has been
drinking constantly at the same bar for the past 8 months. He ends
up coming home bloody because he falls down when walking
home from the bar. Clearly, he should move closer to the bar.
The fallacy of red herring occurs when the arguer shifts topics or
diverts attention from the central issue introduced. The arguer
then goes on to draw some conclusion, or no conclusion, but
pretends to have won the argument or established a conclusion.
In identifying red herring one should look carefully for the topic
to be debated, and then attempt to discern if the topic has been
shifted to a distinct topic.
Red herring and straw man are often hard to tease apart, since
both involve a shift of some kind. In red herring the important
point is that one shifts in order to divert attention to another
issue.
Red Herring
Examples
Public health care is really a bad idea. Socialism is all about giving
people things they don’t deserve. But everybody should work for
an pay for what they deserve. Health care is a service. So,
socialism is a bad idea.
For example:
Samson paints are the best quality paints for the outdoors, because Brad
Pitt says so.
Samson paints are the best quality paints for the outdoors, because
leading authority on paints and materials John Smith says so.
Example:
There are no craters on the far side of the moon, since no one has
ever seen any.
The fact that no one has seen any does not prove that there aren’t
any. The absence of evidence is not the same as evidence of the
absence.
Sometimes appeals to ignorance-like arguments make sense. For
example: All research into a cure for cancer has yielded no result,
so there probably is no cure for cancer.
Fallacies of Weak Induction: Hasty Generalization
Example:
13 kids at Rosemont High were found to be using cocaine. So, all
the kids in that school are drug addicts.
Clearly 13 is too low of a number to draw that kind of conclusion.
In hasty generalization one must carefully think about what amount
of the population would need to be adequately investigated for the
purposes of drawing the generalization that the arguer draws.
Fallacies of Weak Induction: Slippery Slope
Examples:
We cannot afford to give the SJSU staff a pay raise. If we give
them a pay raise, then they will have no incentive to work hard. If
they have no incentive to work hard, they will eventually work
less, and take more vacations. If they take more vacations, we will
eventually not have a functioning university. Since we need a
functioning university, we cannot give the staff a pay raise.
Tomatoes are round and red. New cars lose 1/3 of their
value as soon as you
Tires are round.
drive them off the lot.
So, tires are red.
So, houses must lose 1/3
of their value as soon as
you buy them.
Fallacies of Causation
It does not follow merely from the fact that event A occurred
before event B that A caused B.
Example: Oversimplified cause
For example:
Abortion is murder. So, abortion is morally wrong.
Marriage is between a man and a woman. So, gay-marriage is wrong.
In both cases the premise is controversial. The whole debate in the
case of abortion is over whether abortion is murder, and the whole
debate in the case of gay-marriage is over whether marriage is
between a man and a woman. So, to cite these premises is to beg the
question since they are controversial, and add no further support for
the conclusion.
Begging the Question: Circular Reasoning
In the first case we repeat the exact same sentence. And in the
second case we say something that is synonymous. How can the
premises of each of these arguments support their conclusions.
These arguments make us want to ask, “How do you know?” the
premises are inadequate for the conclusion.
Fallacies of Presumption: Complex Question
For example:
Have you stoped using drugs?
In a question like this if the person answers ‘yes’ then it implies
that he was using drugs. If the person answers ‘no’ then it implies
that he is still using drugs.
Either way something has been implied which may not apply to the
person.
Fallacies of Presumption: False Dichotomy
The fallacy of false dichotomy occurs when one argues that there
are only two options from which one can choose, and because of
additional reasons one ought to choose one of the options.
Example
You can either increase taxes or cut welfare programs, since you
cannot cut welfare programs, you have to increase taxes.
The argument assumes that there are only two options. Any time an
argument assumes that there are only a couple of options, one
should question whether those are the only options. If there are
other options, then the argument commits the fallacy of false
dichotomy.
Fallacies of Presumption: Suppressed Evidence
For example:
America dropped more bombs in the Vietnam war than it did in the
second world war. Therefore, more damage was caused in the
Vietnam war than the second world war.
What is missing in the argument above is the relation between bombs
dropped and damage caused. We used nuclear weapons in the second
world war and not in the Vietnam war, and nuclear weapons cause
more damage than conventional bombs.
Fallacies of Ambiguity: Equivocation
For example:
Plants are used to produce cars.
Plants are used to produce oxygen.
So, plants are used to produce both cars and oxygen.
For example:
John said that he loves flying airplanes. Thus, John must love
looking up in the sky.
‘John loves flying airplanes’ can be read in two ways. (1) John is a
pilot and loves flying, (2) John loves watching airplanes at air
shows.
The arguer has drawn a conclusion based on one interpretation of
the statement. The interpretation maybe faulty.
Fallacies of Grammatical Analogy: Composition
For example:
Every part of the watch is small, so the watch is small.
Every part of the shirt is red, so the shirt is red.
The watch example is a fallacy of composition because size is not a
transferable property from part to whole.
The shirt example is not a fallacy since color, in some cases, is a
transferable property from part to whole.
Fallacies of Grammatical Analogy: Division
The fallacy of division occurs when one infers that a part has a
property since the whole has a property.
For example:
The empire state building is tall. So, all of its parts are tall.
The empire state building is extended in space. So all of its parts
are extended in space.
In the case of the empire state building and size we have a fallacy,
since size does not transfer from whole to part.
In the case of the empire state building and extension in space we
do not have a fallacy since extension in space does transfer.
Things to keep in mind
Make sure to check the content and context, and do not use form
alone to determine if a fallacy is present.
Always try to argue for the fallacy you think a passage commits.
Procedure for Fallacy
2. Focus on the conclusion and the premises –try to state them in your own
words, ask: Are the premises relevant to the conclusion? Does the
conclusion contain a causal claim? Is the conclusion a generalization? Is
the conclusion a question?
3. Read the passage over looking for words that can be used in multiple
ways. Also look to see if there is a suspect form of reasoning at play in
the passage.