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    Logical Fallacies Exercise

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    Answers to fallacy exercise‚ Part 2. I. Identify the fallacies of sufficiency committed by the following arguments‚ giv­ing a brief explanation for your answer. If no fallacy is committed‚ write "no fallacy."1 1. The Daily News carried an article this morning about three local teenagers who were arrested on charges of drug possession. Teenagers these days are nothing but a bunch of junkies. Hasty Generalization – not enough examples. 2. If a car breaks down on the freeway‚ a passing mechanic is

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    rhetorical analysis

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    The Article‚ Supplements are a Shame by Mike Tanier‚ argues one big factor that is influenced by many athletes‚ gym rats‚ and regular Americans who take supplements on a daily basis. The main argument that this article stresses is how most of the supplements that people take is just a big waste of money. Mike Tanier also argues that there is a lot more we don’t know about supplements than what we actually do know. For instance‚ even though we do not know how big the supplement industry is‚ we have

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    school (less pressure to have to work in order to suppliment the family income)‚ and labor statistics indicated that people were still showing up to their jobs despite having the extra source of income. (Surowiecki) Having opened with a strong logical argument‚ he then goes on to lay out a basic idea of what universal basic income‚ or UBI for short would mean for citizens of the US. “Every year‚ every adult citizen in the U.S. would receive a stipend—ten thousand dollars is a number often mentioned. (Children

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    Essay Week 1 Com 220

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    made good arguments as to why we we do and why we cannot ignore these injustices. We must stand up and fight against those who oppress. It is so easy to ignore something happening right next to you when it does not affect you. Live and let live‚ don’t ask don’t tell‚ what I cant see cant hurt me...All of these things we say to ourselves to feel better about not standing up against evil. Feel better about being selfish human beings. In this essay I will discuss the different Arguments made‚ how these

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    parenting

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    cause of these differences. However‚ Chua greatly oversimplifies the issue of parenting‚ stereotyping both the Chinese and Western cultures‚ and she does not address the negative consequences of the Chinese parenting perspective. Chua begins her argument with a list of what her children can and cannot do‚ as proof as to why they are successful. She sets up a Western v/s Chinese dichotomy‚ comparing Western parenting strategies to Chinese parenting strategies. While Chua admits that she has seen parents

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    PhI 103Dq 4

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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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    Rhetorical Analysis * A RHETORICAL ANALYSIS REFERS TO THE PROCESS OF ANALYZING A TEXT‚ GIVEN SOURCE OR ARTIFACT.  * No judgment- only analysis * Explores content‚ purpose‚ background (of author)‚ structure‚ and the topic of a text * RHETORIC IS THE ABILITY TO EFFECTIVELY COMMUNICATE AN INTENDED MESSAGE * via argumentation‚ persuasion‚ or another form of communication. * Critical Reading- ask questions while you read (SOAPStoned) * What is the subject

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    Debate Reflection Essay

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    Reflection Essay 10/5/13 Ryan Lan A debate is a structured argument‚ and most of the time there will be two or more team speak on a particular topic or issue. Each team will have two or three people to answer and argue over a topic. Although every team will get a chance to speak‚ but there are time limit‚ which the speaker would questioned as soon as he conclude his speech. Debate can help to argue against a natural point of arguments in an orderly way. When having a debate‚ there are six basics

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    Study Questions 1

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    that are to be used to structure your writing. The authors of They Say; I Say show us how these templates can significantly improve our academic writing by formatting what we want to say in a way that will be more convincing and produce stronger arguments. The book was written as a tool to help students become stronger writers‚ and these “templates”‚ these basic moves that are so crucial in this type of writing‚ help us enter the world of academic writing. 2) The book explains how when we learned

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    people‚ Bubba uses the emotion of the masses to fuel has arguments. The boy on trial is from a rough area where it is common to believe is a breeding ground for crooks and criminals‚ and any person with a brain could see truth behind that. It is unrealistic that you can sift through the evil and find the few good apples in the bunch‚ any person could agree with that. Bubba takes the values of an entire audience and uses them in his arguments; nobody can say that he is wrong but at the same time what

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