Claims & Evidence
Reasoning Types
Fallacies in Reasoning
Evaluating/Improving Arguments
Rhetorical Devices
100

The main idea or position the author wants the reader to accept.

What is a claim?

100

Using structured, rational thinking to reach a conclusion.

What is logical reasoning?

100

A flaw or error in reasoning that weakens an argument.

What is a logical fallacy?

100

To judge how strong, logical, and convincing it is.

What does it mean to evaluate an argument?

100

The art of using language to persuade or influence others.

What is rhetoric?

200

Facts, examples, or data used to support a claim.

What is evidence in an argument?

200

Starting with a general truth and applying it to a specific case.

What is deductive reasoning?

200

Attacking the person making the argument instead of the argument itself.

What is an ad hominem fallacy?

200

It is logical, clearly explained, and connects evidence directly to the claim.

What is effective reasoning?

200

An appeal to emotion.

What is pathos?

300

To explain how or why the evidence supports the claim.

What is the purpose of reasoning?

300

Drawing a general conclusion from specific examples or evidence.

What is inductive reasoning?

300

Bringing up unrelated information to distract from the main issue.

What is a red herring fallacy?

300

It relies on emotional language, irrelevant evidence, or flawed logic.

What is a weak argument?

300

An appeal to logic or reason.

An appeal to logic or reason.

400

Strong arguments rely on accurate, trustworthy, and connected information.

What is relevant and credible evidence?

400

Making the most likely conclusion from limited or incomplete evidence.

What is abductive reasoning?

400

Comparing two things that aren’t truly alike in a way that supports the claim.

What is a false/weak analogy?

400

Use data, examples, and expert sources.

What is making an argument more convincing? 

400

An appeal to credibility, trust, or ethics.

What is ethos?

500

Each claim should be directly supported by clear and logical evidence.

What is building a strong argument? 

500

Its ideas follow a clear, reasonable order.

What is a logical argument?

500

Making a conclusion based on too little or biased evidence.

What is a hasty generalization?

500

Flawed logic, irrelevant evidence, or lack of reasoning.

What is a weak argument?

500

Any question asked for effect, not to get an answer.

What is a rhetorical question?

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