fallacy 1
fallacy 2
fallacy 3
fallacy 4
100

Switching argument from issue at hand to the character of the other speaker

(Ad hominem)

100

correlation does not imply causation, incorrect to claim that something is a cause just because it happened earlier, few things have only one cause

(post hoc ergo propter hoc)

100

speaker uses a deliberately poor or oversimplified example to ridicule an opponent’s viewpoint

(straw man)

100

Smoking isn’t bad for you; my great aunt smoked a pack a day and lived to be 90.

Fallacies of insufficiency

200

speaker skips to new and irrelevant topic to avoid topic of discussion, changing the subject

(Red herring)

200

When the speaker presents 2 extreme options as the only possible choices

(either/or fallacy, or false dilemma)

200

When there’s not enough evidence

(Fallacies of insufficiency)

200

My friends play video games all night, so it’s alright.

bandwagon appeal-ad populum

300

Everybody’s doing it so it must be a good thing

(bandwagon appeal-ad populum)

300

When 2 things are not comparable, irrelevant or inconsequential similarities

(faulty analogy)

300

Repeating the claim as a way to provide evidence

(circular reasoning)

300

To argue that because we put animals who are in irreversible pain out of their misery, we should do the same for people, asks the reader to ignore significant and profound differences between animals and people.

faulty analogy

400

When someone who has no expertise to speak on an issue is cited as an authority

(appeal to false authority)

400

You argue that a park in your community should not be renovated because the person supporting it was arrested during a domestic dispute.

(Ad hominem)

400

We elected Johnson as president and look where it got us: hurricanes, floods, stock market crashes.

 (post hoc ergo propter hoc)

400

You can’t give me a C; I’m an A student!

circular reasoning

500

Politician X proposes that we put astronauts on Mars in the next four years. Politician Y ridicules this proposal by saying that his opponent is looking for “little green men in outer space.”

(straw man)

500

 If Politician X says, “We can debate these regulations until the cows come home, but what the American people want to know is, when are we going to end this partisan bickering?”

(Red herring)

500

 Either we agree to higher taxes, or our grandchildren will be mired in debt.

either/or fallacy, or false dilemma

500

A TV star, for instance, is not a medical expert, even though pharmaceutical advertisements often use celebrity endorsements.

appeal to false authority

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