Avoiding the Question
Making Assumptions
Statistical Fallacies
Propaganda
Misc.
100

This fallacy distracts from the main issue by introducing an unrelated topic.

Red Herring

100

“I’m trustworthy because I always tell the truth.”

Circular Reasoning

100

“No one has proven aliens don’t exist, so they must be real.”

Lack of evidence

100

This fallacy tries to win support by making the audience feel sorry for someone.

Appeal to Pity

100

“We’ve always used this textbook, so it must be the best one.”

Appeal to Tradition

200

This fallacy attacks the person making the argument instead of the argument itself.

Ad hominem

200

This fallacy asks a question that contains an unfair or hidden assumption.

Loaded Question

200

This fallacy compares two things that aren’t truly alike in relevant ways.

Weak Analogy

200

“If we don’t buy this security system, we could be robbed at any moment!”

Appeal to Fear

200

This fallacy suggests something is better just because it’s newer or more advanced.

Appeal to Technology

300

“I know everyone has to turn in homework on time, but I was really tired last night.”

Special Pleading

300

“If we let students redo one test, soon they’ll expect to retake every assignment.”

Slippery Slope

300

“I met two rude people from that city, so everyone there must be unfriendly.”

Hasty generalization
300

“Everyone’s switching to this phone plan—you should too!”

Bandwagon

300

“This school is award-winning, so every single teacher here must be amazing.”

Whole to part

400

This fallacy judges something as good or bad based on its origin rather than its merits.

Genetic Fallacy

400

“You either support this policy, or you hate progress.”

Either-Or

400

This fallacy assumes that because one event followed another, the first caused the second.

Post hoc ergo propter hoc

400

“Only the most sophisticated people wear this brand.”

Snob Appeal

400

“This player is amazing, so the whole team must be unbeatable.”

Part to Whole

500

“You say I shouldn’t cheat, but you cheated last year!”

Tu Quoque

500

This fallacy uses a word with multiple meanings to mislead or confuse.

Equivocation

500

“I wore my lucky socks and then aced the test. The socks must have helped!”

Post hoc ergo propter hoc

500

A soda ad shows a famous athlete drinking it after winning a gold medal.

Transfer

500

“Hurry! This offer ends in 10 minutes—don’t miss out!”

Exigency

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