Latin, Please
Fallacies of relevance
Numerical and statistical slip-ups
Presumptuous premonitions
Slippery Slopes and band wagoning
100

 Latin for "to the person," it happens when you attack your opponent instead of their argument.

Ad Hominen

100

You should believe this claim because a famous celebrity or athlete says it's true.

Appeal to Authority

100

Every time I wear my lucky socks, my team wins; therefore, the socks cause the victory

Correlation does not equal causation

100

Also called an "Either/Or" fallacy, it wrongly claims there are only two possible choices in a situation.

False Dilemma

100

The claim that someone should do something because everyone else is doing it.

Bandwagon

200

Meaning "to the people," this fallacy claims a statement is true because the majority of people believe it.

Ad Populum

200

 This "fishy" fallacy involves distracting the audience from the main issue by bringing up a completely different, unrelated topic

Red Herring

200

A gambler’s mistake of thinking that because a coin landed on heads five times in a row, tails is "due" to happen next.

Gamblers Fallacy

200

This fallacy assumes that what is true for one individual part of a group must also be true for the entire group as a whole.

Fallcay of composition

200

A commercial that says, "Million of Americans use this toothpaste, so you should too," is using this "popular" tactic.

Bandwagon fallacy

300

This Latin phrase, literally translated as "to ignorance," describes an argument that claims something must be true simply because it hasn't been proven false (or vice versa).

Ad Ignorantiam

300

 Instead of attacking the real argument, you misrepresent it as a weaker, "hollow" version that is easier to defeat.

Straw man

300

Drawing a broad conclusion based on a tiny or non-representative sample size.

Hasty generalization

300

 This "circular" argument uses the conclusion itself as one of the supporting premises.

Circular reasoning

300

We shouldn't change how this is done because thats how it always has been.

Appeal to tradition

400

Frequently seen in celebrity endorsements, this Latin phrase meaning "appeal to reverence" occurs when a claim is argued to be true simply because an authority figure—often one with no expertise in the relevant field—supports it.

Ad Verecundiam

400

Often called the "You Too" fallacy, it dismisses a person's viewpoint because they don't follow their own advice.

Tu Quoque

400

This Latin phrase, meaning "with this, therefore because of this," is the statistical error of assuming that because two variables are trending together at the same time, one must be causing the other.

 Correlation-Causation fallacy

400

The opposite of composition; assuming that because a group has a certain property, every individual in it must have it too.

Fallacy of division

400

 If we let students use calculators today, tomorrow they’ll forget how to add, and by next year the entire economy will collapse.

Slippery Slope

500

"Post hoc ergo propter hoc" describes the error of assuming that because Event B happened after Event A, A must have caused B.

False cause

500

This fallacy claims something must be true simply because it hasn't been proven false yet.

Appeal to ignorance

500

This error occurs when someone justifies continuing a failing project just because they’ve already spent a lot of money on it.

Sunk cost fallacy

500

This happens when someone protects a generalized claim by dismissing any counter-examples as "not authentic".

No true scotsman

500

 The claim that one small first step will inevitably lead to a chain of extreme, catastrophic consequences.

Slippery slope

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