"13 fallacies of presumption" Essays and Research Papers

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    Chapter 13

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    Chapter 13 Student: ___________________________________________________________________________ 1. As an exporter‚ according to the opening case‚ which of these is a key problem for Megahertz Communications? A. Credibility of foreign governments B. Financing C. Substandard products for foreign markets D. Language E. Country specific technical standards 2. In the United States‚ what percent of firms export‚ according to the U.S. Small Business Administration? A. Nearly 98 percent B. About 23 percent

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    2 13

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    Bob made a fantastic puppet. 7) Jane left work at 8 pm last night. 8) Joseph cleaned the fish bowl. 9) Who invented the telephone? 10) The thief stole all the money in the till. 11) Who has written this poem? 12) When will they hold the annual dance? 13) Many tourists visit the Eiffel Tower every year. 14) Did you give the parcel to Susie? 15) The fire damaged many buildings in the city centre. 16) The repairman is fixing the washing mashing machine. 17) Has Victoria sent out the invitations ? 18)

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    Post-Hoc Fallacy Analysis

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    always accurate. In the article‚ Miner argues that because labor “unions have been increasing wage rates” and a depression‚ inflation‚ and unemployment have ensued means that the labor unions have caused these economic downturns. According to Post-Hoc Fallacy‚ this reasoning isn’t always correct because there could be other factor influencing the economic problems other than the labor unions. Raised interest rates‚ deregulation‚ and even wars can affect the economy in harmful ways; the connection between

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    I found several videos that give good examples of logical fallacies. All the DirecTV commercials in this compilation are good examples of the slippery slope fallacy. Each commercial shows how having cable TV can lead to a chain of events that result in bad outcomes. These commercials used the slippery slope fallacy on purpose to entertain the audience. A slippery slope fallacy claims that once you make one choice‚ a chain of events will inevitably follow. The truth is that making the first choice

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    case 13

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    CASE 13-BLOWING THE WHISTLE:ACCOUNTINGPRACTICES AT GLENFAIR ELECTRONICS Background overview Bob Schein‚ is a vice president of human resources at Glefair Electronics‚ as a listed company‚ Glenfair was required by the securities and exchange commission to issue public sales and profit forecasts Glenfair Electronics had over 10‚000 employees and a reputation for producing high-quality electronic components used in a number of manufacturing applications.the company had begun to experience a slowdown

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    Logical Fallacies is done manipulatively‚ always done on purpose and targets people’s ignorance and more of stupidity. The trial of the slave known as tituba is a perfect example of logical fallacy‚ because she had got beat really bad. Sweeping generalization is a logical fallacy where it can be named too broadly and where it can be applied to a general statement. Tituba fitted in this logical fallacy because people back then thoughtthough slaves were uncleaned and very low of the slaves and especially

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    Ch 13

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    CHAPTER 13 – CURRENT LIABILITIES AND CONTINGENCIES I. Liabilities A. Three Characteristics 1. Probable‚ future sacrifices of economic benefits 2. That arise from present obligations 3. Resulting from past transactions B. Current Liabilities 1. Payable within 1 year 2. Reported at maturity value C. Types of Current Liabilities 1. Accounts Payable a. Buy merchandise on account

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    Fallacies and “Dirty Tricks” Identification The first person to try and categorize and systematically describe fallacies was Aristotle. He managed to identify thirteen different fallacies and divided them into two groups: Informal and Formal. The Informal Fallacy is hard to find because they can only be found and identified when you analyze the content of the argument. The Formal Fallacy is easy to identify because there is a defect to it and when you look at the logical formation of

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    the dramatic Fallacy to keep ratings high‚ media seek strange/violent incidents to report/create dramas around murder makes up less than 1% of all crime‚ yet from watching TV or reading the papers‚ it seems like a commonplace events seems that most murders are well-planned‚ grisly affairs‚ or they happen solely by random chance in fact‚ most murders start as arguments that escalate into violence most crimes are relatively minor property crimes 2. the cops and courts fallacy police work made

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    I THE FUSION FALLACY If an Australian lawyer were asked about the significance of 1975 in the development of Australian law‚ he or she would no doubt point to the famous constitutional crisis that culminated‚ on Armistice Day of that year‚ in the use by the Governor-General of the ‘reserve powers’ to dismiss the government of the day. That event generated great legal and political controversy for many years‚ and ‘left many unresolved problems’.[2] Yet‚ except as an issue in the now muted republican

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