Flaws Flashcards

1
Q

Attacking the source of the argument

A

To attack an argument you may attack:
1) the support the premises give to the conclusion
What you DO NOT get to do is to attack the author, his past acts or arguments, his motivation, where the argument comes from, or anything other than (2).

EX: For instance, saying that the Congressman voted to change the law because he had significant investments in the pertinent industry, and therefore the bill should not be passed.
That argument attacks the person making the argument but says nothing about whether there are justifiable reasons the bill should or should not be passed.

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2
Q

Uses terms unclearly/equivocation

A

The author uses a term (with more than one meaning) inconsistently.

EX: For example, “public interest” in one sense means what is in the best interest of the public (e.g., clean air, roads, schools). In another sense, it means what the public is interested in (e.g., celebrity gossip). The shift in word meaning will often be subtle and hard to notice.

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3
Q

Analogies that really aren’t analogous enough

A

All arguments by analogy fall apart at some point. At some point the two things being analogized lose their relevant similarities and the analogy cannot continue.

EX: We can say attacking LSAT questions is like attacking enemy starships. But it’s not is it.

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4
Q

Appealing to authority in an area outside their expertise

A

Appealing to an authority where the subject matter is outside the expertise of the authority.

EX: For example, a dentist’s opinions on automotive maintenance is not authoritative.

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5
Q

Causation confusions

A

Whenever the LSAT concludes or assumes that A causes B, 99.9% of the time it’s wrong. They’ll tell you A is correlated with B or that A coincided with B and therefore A caused B. Maybe. That’s just one possible explanation for the correlation.

Here are the other 3 possible explanations:

1) B caused A
2) C caused both A and B
3) A and B are merely coincidentally correlated and really something else, X, caused B.

Ex: We see this a lot with accident rate and speed sign questions. New speed limit sign was put up! Accident rates drop! Therefore, it must be that the new speed limit sign dropped the accident rate.
Maybe. But maybe there was an increase in cop cars patrolling the area and that’s what actually caused the drop in accident rates. The speed limit sign was just coincidentally there.

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6
Q

Circular reasoning

A

Assuming what you’re trying to prove. The premise is a mere restatement of the conclusion.

EX: “Everything I say is true. This is true because I said it, and everything I say is true.”

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7
Q

Confusing necessary and sufficient conditions

A

Reads the conditionals supplied the premise incorrectly

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8
Q

False dichotomy

A

A false dichotomy only pretends to divide the universe into two binary halves. It is not a real contradiction.
EX: Consider this real contradiction: cats and non-cats. Everything you can conceive of falls cleanly into either the “cats” category or the “non-cats” category and nothing is left out. False dichotomy: Cats and dogs. See how that leaves out Einstein, MacBook Pro, and Love? They are neither cats nor dogs.

Limiting Spectrum
Pretends there are only two options, when there are really three; up/down/unchanged. Ex; hiring freeze…. So edu is deteriorating; spectrum limiting

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9
Q

False dichotomy

A

A false dichotomy only pretends to divide the universe into two binary halves. It is not a real contradiction.
EX: Consider this real contradiction: cats and non-cats. Everything you can conceive of falls cleanly into either the “cats” category or the “non-cats” category and nothing is left out. False dichotomy: Cats and dogs. See how that leaves out Einstein, MacBook Pro, and Love? They are neither cats nor dogs.

Limiting Options
Pretends that there are only two options when there can be more

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10
Q

Confusing probability for certainty

A

Could be is not must be. Even if something is 99% likely to happen, it does not mean that it will happen. Confusing “is” for “ought”. Don’t confuse the descriptive for the prescriptive.
Descriptive simply describes the state of the world. The tree is small. The lake is murky.
Prescriptive reveals values. The tree ought to be big. The lake should be clear. The prescriptive reveals what we care about.
You will typically encounter a descriptive premise leading to a prescriptive conclusion.

EX: The house is on fire therefore we should put the fire out.

That’s not a good argument. There may be a number of reasons why we wouldn’t want to put the fire out. We always need a bridge premise to take us from the descriptive world of the premises to the prescriptive world of the conclusion. The bridge premise in the example argument above would be: Houses that are on fire ought to have their fires put out.

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11
Q

Percentages v. quantity

A

Percentages don’t necessarily reveal quantity and vice versa.

EX: Group A wants a 10% raise and Group B wants a 50% raise. Who will earn more money afterward? Who is asking for more money? We have no way to know based on this information.

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12
Q

Surveys and samplings to reach a general conclusion

A

Remember that surveys and samplings must be random (that is, non-biased).

Ex: Asking a group of 20 year olds about who they are voting for will only tell you who 20 year olds are voting for (assuming they’re a statistically random set of 20 year olds regarding race, gender, etc.), not who the entire country will vote for.

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13
Q

Hasty generalization

A

Conclusion is very broad. You cannot make a generalization based on small sample size or based on one or two incidents.

Experiments to reach a general conclusion
Experiments to reach a general conclusion must include a control group. It must also establish the baseline of what is measured before the experiment begins.

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14
Q

Your argument fails therefore the opposite of your conclusion must be true

A

Just because you’ve wrecked someone’s argument, doesn’t mean that you get to conclude the opposite of his conclusion.

EX: If I make a crappy argument for going to the movies tonight as opposed to going to a bar or doing any number of things, you can’t just show me why my argument sucks and conclude: therefore we should go to a bar. First of all, there could be other arguments made to support going to the movies. Additionally, you still have the burden of making an argument that we should go to the bar.

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15
Q

Relative v. absolute

A

A is faster than B, therefore A is fast. Well, not necessarily. A is faster than B in relative terms. It doesn’t imply that A is fast in absolute terms.

EX: we know that the conclusion in this statement is not true: “Hippopotamuses are smaller than elephants. Therefore, hippopotamuses are small.” Or take this statement: “Turtles are faster than ants. Therefore, turtles are fast.”

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16
Q

Confusing one possible solution for the only solution

A

There are many ways to solve a problem. Just because one solution solves a problem doesn’t mean that particular solution is the only solution that can solve the problem. Nor, for that matter, does it mean it is the best solution.

EX: If I nuke Cleveland, then the city’s public education problem kind of disappears… along with everything else. So, yeah, not the best solution.

This flaw can also be used in the negative. This happens when one solution to a problem turns out to not solve the problem, and then the conclusion might say that the problem cannot be solved or that the problem shouldn’t be solved. The flaw remains: just because one solution to a problem is inadequate doesn’t mean that the problem itself cannot be solved.

17
Q

Red herring

A

This happens when the argument doesn’t address the relevant issue. Rather, it addresses some other issue that is tangential or has nothing to do with the relevant issue but, for some reason, commands your attention.

18
Q

Tradition fallacy and novelty fallacy

A

The fact that something is old doesn’t mean that it is right or better. In the same vein, just because things have been done a certain way for a long time doesn’t mean that it is right or better.
Likewise, just because something is new doesn’t entail that it is the best course of action. Nor does it entail that the old thing or idea is no longer relevant or true. Change for the sake of change is not an argument; there must be something that shows the change is better.

19
Q

Confusing part vs. whole

A

The correct way to think about it is in terms of properties that transfer vs. properties that don’t transfer. Some properties transfer from part to whole or from whole to part. Some properties don’t. You have to look at it on a case by case basis.

EX: A drop of water is “wet.”
We can say that being “wet” is a property of a drop of water.

Does that property transfer up (to the whole) or down (to its parts)? Well, that depends actually. If we’re talking about a pool of water, then that property transfers. A pool of water (whole) is wet just like a drop of water (part) is wet. If we’re talking about the molecules of a drop of water, then that property does not transfer. Each water molecule, H2O (part), is not wet even though a (whole) bunch of them, namely, a drop of water, is wet.

20
Q

Beliefs v. facts or Implication

A

EX: A fast radio burst (FRB) is a high-energy astrophysical phenomenon manifested as a transient radio pulse lasting only a few milliseconds. Dr. Lorimer knows that her colleague’s lab detected such a burst earlier this year. Therefore, Dr. Lorimer knows that her colleague’s lab detected a radio pulse lasting only a few milliseconds.

The error in the above argument has to do with conflating facts about the world with people’s beliefs or knowledge of those facts. In the above argument, it’s clear to us just what a FRB is. Namely, that it’s a high-energy astro…. But it’s not clear at all that Dr. Lorimer knows what an FRB is, except that her colleague’s lab detected one.

21
Q

False Starts

A

Researchers assume that the two groups are the same in all respects except the ones called out as part of the study

22
Q

Straw Man

A

Straw Man arguments “respond” to an opponent by “mishearing” what was said to them, distorted the argument; make it easier to take down

23
Q

Lack of relevant evidence for conclusion

A

fail to provide proper evidence
author cites irrelevant evidence
draws conclusion not warranted by evidence provided

24
Q

Internal contradiction

A

author make conflicting statements
bases conclusion on claims that are inconsistent with each other

Ex: “everyone should join our country club. After all, it’s an exclusive group that links many of the influential members of the community.”