Chapter 26 New Flashcards

1
Q

Arbitrarily assuming what one is attempting to prove as part of the proof.

A

Begging the question

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2
Q

An argument that has some degree of unavoidable circularity due to the essential nature of the claim, and yet is self-consistent and non-arbitrary.

A

virtuous circle

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3
Q

A way of reasoning that arbitrarily assumes what the person is attempting to prove. They commit the fallacy of begging the question.

A

vicious circle

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4
Q

Something that is based on speculation or conjecture for the sake of discussion or argument.

A

hypothetical

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5
Q

Using biased (often emotional) language to persuade people rather than using logic.

A

question - begging epithet

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6
Q

Attempting to persuade by asking a loaded question.

A

complex question

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7
Q

Claiming there are only two mutually exclusive possibilities, when there is a third option (or more).

A

fallacy of bifurcation

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8
Q

The error of defining a term in a biased way that would not be found in a dictionary in order to protect a claim from evidence to the contrary.

A

the no true scotsman fallacy

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