Greetings, logicians! You have three responsibilities this week. First, here are
ID: 3496895 • Letter: G
Question
Greetings, logicians! You have three responsibilities this week. First, here are some of the fallacies you studied:
Table shows fallacies
1. Pick one of these fallacies or any other (try to pick one different from your classmates') and write a brief example of it and a brief explanation of its fallaciousness. Your sentence should have a false premise, factual error, or logical inconsistency making it invalid or unsound.
Example 1:
The governor was an action movie star, all brawn and no brains. How can we expect him to lead?
--> This is an ad hominem fallacy because it impugns a person's character ("no brains") without any evidence while also associating that purported trait with an unrelated attribute (being unable to lead).
2. Create either an unsound or a sound syllogism based on anything you want. An unsound syllogism must be logically invalid, factually untrue, or both. A sound syllogism must be both logically valid and true. After you write your unsound or sound syllogism, state why the conclusion, major/minor premises, facts, etc., are flawed or flawless.
Example 2:
I'm opting to write an unsound syllogism here...
Davis is a sub-par rhythm guitarist.
Davis is an English teacher.
Therefore, all English teachers are sub-par rhythm guitarists.
--> Untrue factually about Davis :) Moreover, opinions can't be proved. This is also invalid logically, as it commits the fallacy of composition wherein something true of one thing is spuriously applied to all similar things. Therefore, this syllogism is "unsound."
3. What's a real world example of a time when you've seen ethos, pathos, and logos in effect at the same event or location? Think politics, interviews, the mall... Share your example with the class.
Table shows fallacies
ambiguity division composition equivocation non sequitur distorting the facts post hoc ergo propter hoc many questions hasty generalization slippery slope parade of horrors false analogy straw man special pleading begging the question false dichotomy oversimplification red herring tu quoque genetic poisoning the well appeal to ignorance appeal to authority appeal to fear death by a thousand qualifications protecting the hypothesis or any other fallacy in the lecture notes or readings!Explanation / Answer
1. Slippery Slope is an argument that suggests taking a minor action will lead to major and sometimes ludicrous consequences. In other words, it suggests that if we allow A to happen, then Z will eventually happen too, with little or no evidence, therefore A should not happen.
Example: If we legalize marijuana, it will be followed by legalizing other drugs as well. Soon, everybody will be consuming drugs and society will stop functioning.
Please post the other questions separately as we are supposed to answer just one question or four subparts of a question.
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