http://yourlogicalfallacyis.com/poster

not in good resolution by half to be worth saving.klr wrote:Saved in triplicate
The various-sized PDF posters are good resolution.Svartalf wrote:not in good resolution by half to be worth saving.klr wrote:Saved in triplicate
Agreed. And "slippery slope" is not even a fallacy; if you can show that A will actually lead to bad thing B, that actually is a reason to avoid A.Seraph wrote:Fast and loose with the definition. There is an overlap between rhetorical tricks and subterfuges on one hand and logical fallacies on the other, but a list of each is not identical. An ad hominem, for example, is not a logical fallacy, and the gambler's fallacy is not usually employed as a rhetorical trick or subterfuge.
It's not a fallacy when you can show that B happening is a good possibility. But when you're talking about A eventually leading to Z, it becomes a logical fallacy. I've always found slippery slopes to be feeble arguments; they tend to rely on paranoia.Warren Dew wrote:Agreed. And "slippery slope" is not even a fallacy; if you can show that A will actually lead to bad thing B, that actually is a reason to avoid A.Seraph wrote:Fast and loose with the definition. There is an overlap between rhetorical tricks and subterfuges on one hand and logical fallacies on the other, but a list of each is not identical. An ad hominem, for example, is not a logical fallacy, and the gambler's fallacy is not usually employed as a rhetorical trick or subterfuge.
Experts are still frequently mistaken, so it's still a fallacy.Tyrannical wrote:Or people forget that an appeal to authority is not a fallacy, when the authority actually is an expert.
No it's not.Warren Dew wrote:Experts are still frequently mistaken, so it's still a fallacy.Tyrannical wrote:Or people forget that an appeal to authority is not a fallacy, when the authority actually is an expert.
Sounds like the excuse of someone with "professor" before his name.FBM wrote:My memory of undergrad Logic class isn't perfect, but I seem to recall the prof stressing that it's an appeal to irrelevant authority that's fallacious. Like Michael Jordan telling you which is the best car to buy, Lady Gaga giving musical advice, etc.
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