Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10-11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
100

Your own personal logic experience used as a reference

Internal Sources

100

The study of the roots and origin of a word.

Etymology

100

An argument tool that compares an abstract idea to a similar, simpler concept that is more common and clear

Analogy

100

Incorrectly blaming one event/ things for causing another

False Cause

100

The witness of everyday examples, ordinary people, and expert authority.

Testimony

200

Types of Argument/ logic  created by Aristotle in his famous book Rhetoric.

Common Topics

200

Words that have an opposite meaning to another word.

Antonyms

200

Comparing two things that are too dissimilar- or, conversely, too similar- for any appropriate conclusion to be drawn.

False Analogy

200

When people research and comprehend elements of the past so they can apply that knowledge to current situations in the present.

Circumstance

200

A wise saying, not always spoken by an expert in the field, that can stand out authoritatively due to its cleverness.

Proverb

300

Someone else's logical example used as a reference

External Sources

300

Words that have the same or a similar meaning to another word

Synonyms

300

The causal link between two factors (i.e., how one factor influences another)

Relationship

300

The belief that because many people are doing something or believing something makes it right.

Bandwagon

300

When someone uses the authority of an expert in one field to prove a point in another field.

Appeal to Illegitimate Authority

400

A commonly recognized type of poor argument; an error in reasoning.

Fallacy

400

Instances or illustrations of a larger group or concept and one of the best ways to clarify a term.

Examples

400

An exception to the rule which is not representative of a generally accepted reality.

Anomaly

400

The belief that whatever is “old” is automatically better.

Appeal to Tradition

400

Incorrectly emphasizing a certain element of a quotation, knowing that what is emphasized is not what the author intended. 

Fallacy of Accent

500

When a person draws a conclusion from a caricatured or otherwise distorted version of his opponent’s argument.

Straw Man Fallacy

500

A reasonable definition for a word that one or two people create on the spot for the purpose of clarifying a term.

Stipulative definition

500

When someone bases a conclusion on too small a sample size, or too few examples

Hasty Generalization

500

The belief that whatever is “new” is automatically better.

Appeal to Novelty

500

Any example or illustration of a result or test. 

Sample

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