Ad-Hominem

Post on 23-Feb-2016

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Ad-Hominem. Attacking the individual that makes the statement rather than the argument. Examples:. To the court: “You cannot accept the testimony of this person, he is a convicted felon” A makes claim X There is something wrong about A Therefore X is wrong. Appeal to probability. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Ad-HominemAttacking the individual that makes the statement rather

than the argument

Examples:

To the court: “You cannot accept the testimony of this person, he is a convicted felon”

A makes claim X

There is something wrong about A

Therefore X is wrong

Appeal to probabilityBelieving that something is inevitable just because it is

probable

Examples:

“There are two many viruses on the internet. Therefore if you log in without an antivirus, you will definitely get a virus”

A is possibleTherefore…A is inevitable

Argument from ignorance

(argumentum ad ignorantiam)

Something is true because it has not be proven false

Examples:

“You cannot prove that there are no Martians living in caves on planet Mars, therefore it is OK for me to believe there are”

There is no evidence for ATherefore A is falseThere is no evidence against ATherefore A is true

Argument to moderation

The middle ground must be correct

Examples:

“Some say vaccines are bad for babies but the WHO says they are good, so the truth must be somewhere in the middle”

A says XB says YThen Z which is in the middle of X and

Y must be correct

Circular reasoningTrying to prove a point by

repeating the same argument in different forms

Examples:

“Andreas Hoca is the best professor, because no one at Zirve University is as good as him”

A is goodBecause A is nice, excellent,

magnificentTherefore A is good

Straw manExaggerating opponents

argument in order to make it easier to attack

Examples:

“The PM said they will not fund the submarines program. I totally disagree, I don’t see why he wants to leave the country defenseless like that”

A says XB present X as YB attacks Y

Hasty GeneralizationReach conclusions on a

population based on a very limited sample

Examples:

“1 is a square number, 3, 5, 7 are prime, 9 is square, 11 is prime. Therefore all odd numbers are either squares or primes”

X% of A are BTherefore all A are B

Cherry pickingCarefully select evidence that

prove our argument and dismiss the ones that don’t

Examples:

“You should avoid garlic cause garlic consumption decreases your blood pressure, and you will feel exhausted”

X, Y, and Z prove AQ,R, and S disprove AWe only use X, Y, and Z

Band wagonPopular ideas are also correct

Examples:

“You should not talk to your shell phone all the time. It will hurt your brain…everyone knows that!”

A, B, C….Z believe X is correctTherefore X is correct

Slippery slopeThe idea that one thing will inevitably lead to another

Examples:

“If we allow gay marriage, next thing you will know, people will ask for polygamy”

If A happensThen be will happen

Argument from authority

Believing something is true because someone with authority

tells it

Examples:

“Saddam must have WMD, the president would never lie to us about it”

A says B is correctA has authorityB must be correct

False dilemmaPutting an argument in a “black

or white” term

Examples:

“I thought you are a good student, but I saw you out having fun the night before the finals”

Either A or B are correct

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