alert you to a number of ways in which reasoning fails. When you have finished this course‚ you may quickly forget the many names and labels but remain alert to failures in reasoning. Common Forms of Pseudoreasoning/Fallacies 1. Smokescreen/Red Herring 2. The Subjectivist Fallacy 3. Appeal to Belief 4. Common Practice 5. Peer Pressure and Bandwagon 6. Wishful Thinking 7. Scare Tactics 8. Appeal to Pity 9. Apple Polishing 10. Horse Laugh/Ridicule/Sarcasm 11. Appeal to Anger or
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MODULE 1 HOMEWORK 4 NEUTRALIZING A FALLACY In each of the following‚ identify and neutralize the fallacy using the 6-step process for neutralizing a fallacy taught in class. Exercise 1: Senator Biddle has argued that we should outlaw violent pornography. The senator obviously favours complete governmental censorship of books‚ magazines and films. I am shocked that such a view should be expressed on the floor of the Senate. It runs counter to everything that this nation stands for.
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Margaret Sanger’s “The Morality of Birth Control” was written with the use of bias and different rhetorical devices and fallacies. An example of bias in the work was written to show the stereotypes and bias experienced by women demonstrated by their male counterparts. She wrote‚ “We know that every advance that woman has made in the last half century has been made with opposition‚ all of which has been based upon the grounds of immorality. When women fought for higher education‚ it was said
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world of self interest ‚ so an incentive program needs to be instituted. At first glance‚ this essay draws the reader in with its heavily persuasive sentimentalism‚ but when readers take a closer look they will notice the substantial quantities of fallacies‚ the lack of sufficient evidence‚ and the poor consideration of counter-arguments. In her essay‚ “Death’s Waiting List”‚ Sally Satel recommends incentives be given to those who donate their organs. She believes this would save many lives‚ because
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of the surroundings than animals (Coren‚ 2009). He also mentioned that used the story of the dog to support their arguments. Consequently it can be inferred that he’s indirectly accusing them of approaching slippery slope fallacy. The author himself used a false dilemma fallacy when he mentioned that in ancient times‚ struggling communities had to either struggle because of their overpopulation and necessity or to kill their children to survive which is not
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Fallacies in Media One rich source of fallacies is the media: television‚ radio‚ magazines‚ and the Internet. The arguments you experience in your daily life (work‚ family‚ shopping) are another source of fallacies. Identify three distinct informal logical fallacies you have experienced in the media or in your life. Explain how the fallacies were used and the context in which they occurred. Then‚ explain what the person presenting the fallacy should have done to ensure that he or she was not committing
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Physical Education Critically discuss the relationship between physical activity‚ exercise and health and what whey means for society? Councils such as north shore city and Auckland promote being healthy and active on there websites. They encourage the community to get out there and become physically fit and active in the greater community. Also adverts on television such as push play ads‚ alcohol ads and depression ads help to inform the community about
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Segment Two Note-Taking Sheet V10 Transformation- Students will need to select a novel from the introduction lesson for this module. Regular choices: Chinese Cinderella‚ Copper Sun‚ Ender’s Game‚ Fallen Angels‚ Hoops‚ Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ The Great Tree of Avalon‚ or The Hot Zone. Honors Choices: Ender’s Game‚ Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ or The Hot Zone. I have chosen to read the book Booker t Washington for this module. I understand that I Daijuan Jackson need to complete
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the target audience. Analyses also call for doing background research of the author‚ which could sway the reader to believe some aspects of the argument and doubt others. Overall‚ the job of a Critical/Analytical Reader is to look at the logical fallacies and strong points the author make to conclude weather an argument is doing what the author ultimately wants‚ persuading there target audience. When it comes to “What’s Wrong with Vocational School‚” Charles Murray’s argument could seem effective
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just blame it on luck. Unfortunately‚ the article “What I’ve Learned from Men” is fruitless because the author hasn’t displayed any credible sources that support what she is claiming and also exhibits an amount of logical fallacies. First of all‚ there are several logical fallacies found in the article‚ which shows us why Barbara’s article is ineffectual. “I‚ a full-grown feminist…had behaved like a ninny-or‚ as I now understand it‚ like a lady.” This sentence is an example of Ad Hominem. The reason
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