Political Science 1020E Chapter : Rulebook for Arguments 73-86

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Fallacies are misleading types of arguments au hominem: Attacking the person of a source rather than his or her qualifications or reliability, or the actual arguement he or she makes ad ignorantian: Arging that a claim is true just because it has not been shown to be false ad misericoridan: Appealing to the emotions of a crowd. I. e. everyone is doing it begging the question: Implicitly using your conclusion as a premise complex questions: Posing a question in such a way that people can not agree or disagree with you without committing themselves to some other claim you wish to promote equivocation: Sliding from one meaning of a term to another in the middle of an argument faluse cause: Generic term for any questionable conclusion about cause and effect false delemma: Reducing the options you consider of just two, often diametrically opposed to each other and unfair to the people against whom the dilemma is posed loaded language:

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