Fallacies

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    Rhetorical Analysis Of President Trump's Speech

    The two examples I have choosen are from President Trump’s inauguration speech. Within the speech President Trump uses a number of these logical fallacies to persuade his audience. 1. “Washington flourished - but the people did not share in its wealth. Politicians prospered - but the jobs left, and the factories closed.” President Trump makes a hasty generalization here as he draws conclusions based on no evidence. He makes these claims without providing any evidence when he says, “but the people

    Words: 277 - Pages: 2

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    1. Red Herring Fallacy Your Answer: occurs when one makes a judgement on the bases of one or even a few samples. This argument is used when a conclusion is made without enough evidence. Right Answer: is raising an irrelevant issue to divert attention from the primary issue. This fallacy often appeals to fear or pity. The argument also can use guilt to manipulate others into agreement and action. It is often inserted into an argument to help a person win the argument without directly dealing with

    Words: 1847 - Pages: 8

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    Assumptions and Fallacies

    Assumptions and Fallacies Write a 150- to 200-word response to each of the following sets of questions: • What are assumptions? How do you think assumptions might interfere with critical thinking? What might you do to avoid making assumptions in your thinking? Assumptions are beliefs or ideas that we have with little evidence or facts. Assumptions can interfere with critical thinking in a major way. If we are working with a group and we assume that the others we work with are less knowledgeable

    Words: 276 - Pages: 2

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    Assumptions and Fallacies

    Associate Level Material Assumptions and Fallacies Write a 150- to 200-word response to each of the following sets of questions: • What are assumptions? How do you think assumptions might interfere with critical thinking? What might you do to avoid making assumptions in your thinking? An assumption is taking something for granted. Assumptions are expecting things to be a certain way based on how similar situations have been in the past, or because we want them to be a certain way

    Words: 419 - Pages: 2

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    Assumptions and Fallacies

    Associate Level Material Assumptions and Fallacies Write a 150- to 200-word response to each of the following sets of questions: • What are assumptions? How do you think assumptions might interfere with critical thinking? What might you do to avoid making assumptions in your thinking? • What are fallacies? How are fallacies used in written, oral, and visual arguments? What might you do to avoid fallacies in your thinking? Cite and reference any sourced material consistent with Associate

    Words: 456 - Pages: 2

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    Logic & Fallacies

    INTRODUCTION LAW FOUNDATION LAW AND … 1. LOGIC 2. SCIENCE 3. THEORY 4. SOCIAL PROBLEMS LAW FOUNDATION Critical = informed and logical Responsible = social equity Creative = independent and considered Interrelations -- with other disciplines and institutions Historical, philosophical, economic, political and social context == acquaintance with historical development of theory Contemporary social issues: · Terrorism · Refugees · Crime and punishment

    Words: 2057 - Pages: 9

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    Fallacies In The Crucible

    In Act three of “The Crucible,” during the altercation between Judge Danforth and Reverend Hale, Judge Danforth’s argument was extremely flawed. There were many instances when Danforth was talking, where he used logical fallacies. Compared to Reverend Hale, who used almost none, and had very sound reasoning. The first example of Judge Danforth’s erroneous argument came across when Hale challenged the credibility of the court system, saying there was “a prodigious fear” of the court in Salem. Furious

    Words: 377 - Pages: 2

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    The Effects of Stereotypes

    we fall victim to being stereotyped without even knowing it. Sometimes it can be blatant, liken if you hear someone speaking derogatory about you, or you feel the unwanted stares from others. But what we don’t realize is that when we commit these fallacies, we run the risk of hurting the very people we are stereotyping. The stereotypes that we encounter in our everyday lives can have lasting effects on ourselves as well as those around us. As an African American woman in charge of a successful business

    Words: 1088 - Pages: 5

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    Fallacies Of Cyberbullying

    One fallacy present is hasty generalization. Schrock starts off by saying, “It is difficult to measure online harassment and cyberbullying because these concepts have no clear and consistent definition” (p1). The author states this too early in his article

    Words: 815 - Pages: 4

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    Sterotype by Me

    still in that office. I still had a lot people would go to my assistant but I tried to not let it bother me and then realize my assistant always had to go through me to get something approved. This is an example of straw man fallacy. Mosser states, “The straw man fallacy takes an opponent’s claim, characterizes that claim unfairly, and then criticizes the opponent on the basis of the unfair characterization” (p.89 ). I feel this customer criticized my unfairly with even knowing me just because

    Words: 711 - Pages: 3

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