Fallacies of Relevance
Component Fallacies
Fallacies of Omission/Ambiguity
100

Claiming an idea is untrustworthy because of its origin.

Genetic Fallacy

100

Assuming one action will lead to an extreme chain of events.

Slippery Slope

100

Changing the meaning of a word during an argument.

Equivocation

200

Attacking the person instead of addressing the argument.

Ad Hominem

200

Drawing a conclusion based on insufficient evidence.

Hasty Generalization

200

Assuming what’s true of the whole is true of its parts.

Division

300

Asserting that something must be true because everyone believes it.

Bandwagon Approach

300

Restating the argument instead of proving it.

Circular Argument

300

Framing a question to imply an unproven claim.

Loaded Argument

400

Claiming that “all the best people are doing it.”

Snob Approach

400

Oversimplifying a situation into only two choices.

Either/Or

400

Arguing something is true because it hasn’t been disproven.

Appeal to a Lack of Evidence

500

Arguing that something is true because it has always been done or believed.

Appeal to Tradition

500

Mistaking correlation for causation.

Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc

500

Claiming something is true because the opposite can't be proven.

Argument from the Negative