Inductive Fallacies Flashcards

1
Q

The Conjunction Fallacy

A

The propositions of A & B is less likely to be true than either A or B on their own, as another condition has been added to the argument

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2
Q

Gambler’s Fallacy

A

Believing that probabilities that are dependent when they are in fact independent, eg: I’ve always had bad luck, things have got to get better

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3
Q

Estimating Coincidences

A

People are prone to underestimate coincidences, eg: out of a group of 10, 5 of us have the same shoe size, that does not mean in a group of 30, 15 of us will have the same shoe size

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4
Q

Generalising from an unrepresentative sample

A

The only safe way of obtaining a representative sample is through ‘randomistaion’

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5
Q

Self-selecting polls

A

Polls which only volunteers take part in are unrepresentative of the population

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6
Q

Base-rate fallacy

A

When estimating the probability of P you have to take into account the probability of P on its own before considering the evidence given

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7
Q

Confusing Correlation with Causation

A

The fact that P and Q are correlated does not mean that P causes Q, eg: all lawyers are very smart => being a lawyer makes you smart

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8
Q

Confirmation Bias

A

If w have a hypothesis we tend to focus on evidence that confirms it and ignore the evidence that goes against it

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