A ___________ is an argument that can be disproven through reasoning?
Logical Fallacy
One that implies a relationship between two things where one can’t actually be proven.
Casual Fallacy
It's popular, so it is the right thing to do?
Bandwagon Fallacy
The arguer claims a specific series of events will follow one starting point, typically with no supporting evidence for this chain of events.
Slippery Slope
Equivocation
One that attempts to invalidate an opponent’s position based on a personal trait or fact about the opponent rather than through logic.
Ad Hominem
An attempt to shift focus by introducing an irrelevant point?
Red Herring
One that argues against a hyperbolic, inaccurate version of the opposition rather than their actual argument.
Straw Man
Justification of their decision to continue their actions by resort of money or time?
Sunk Cost Fallacy
Also known as a tu quoque fallacy, is a rebuttal that responds to one claim with reactive criticism rather than with a response to the claim itself.
Appeal to Hypocrisy