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This book presents descriptions and examples of 42 common informal
fallacies: Ad Hominem Ad Hominem Tu Quoque Appeal to the
Consequences of a Belief Appeal to Authority Appeal to Belief
Appeal to Common Practice Appeal to Emotion Appeal to Fear Appeal
to Flattery Appeal to Novelty Appeal to Pity Appeal to Popularity
Appeal to Ridicule Appeal to Spite Appeal to Tradition Begging the
Question Biased Generalization Burden of Proof Circumstantial Ad
Hominem Fallacy of Composition Confusing Cause and Effect Fallacy
of Division False Dilemma Gambler's Fallacy Genetic Fallacy Guilt
by Association Hasty Generalization Ignoring a Common Cause Middle
Ground Misleading Vividness Peer Pressure Personal Attack Poisoning
the Well Post Hoc Questionable Cause Red Herring Relativist Fallacy
Slippery Slope Special Pleading Spotlight Straw Man Two Wrongs Make
a Right
30 Fallacies is a companion book for 42 Fallacies. 42 Fallacies is
not, however, required to use this book. It provides concise
descriptions and examples of thirty common informal fallacies.
Accent, Fallacy of Accident, Fallacy of Amphiboly, Fallacy of
Appeal to Envy Appeal to Group Identity Appeal to Guilt Appeal to
Silence Appeal to Vanity/Elitism Argumentum ad Hitlerum Complex
Question Confusing Explanations and Excuses Cum Hoc, Ergo Propter
Hoc Equivocation, Fallacy of Fallacious Example Fallacy Fallacy
Historian's Fallacy Illicit Conversion Incomplete Evidence Moving
the Goal Posts Oversimplified Cause Overconfident Inference from
Unknown Statistics Pathetic Fallacy Positive Ad Hominem Proving X,
Concluding Y Psychologist's fallacy Rationalization Reification,
Fallacy of Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy Victim Fallacy Weak Analogy
The book presents the following 73 informal fallacies: Accent,
Fallacy of Accident, Fallacy of Ad Hominem Ad Hominem Tu Quoque
Amphiboly, Fallacy of Anecdotal Evidence, Fallacy Of Appeal to the
Consequences of a Belief Appeal to Authority, Fallacious Appeal to
Belief Appeal to Common Practice Appeal to Emotion Appeal to Envy
Appeal to Fear Appeal to Flattery Appeal to Group Identity Appeal
to Guilt Appeal to Novelty Appeal to Pity Appeal to Popularity
Appeal to Ridicule Appeal to Spite Appeal to Tradition Appeal to
Silence Appeal to Vanity Argumentum ad Hitlerum Begging the
Question Biased Generalization Burden of Proof Complex Question
Composition, Fallacy of Confusing Cause and Effect Confusing
Explanations and Excuses Circumstantial Ad Hominem Cum Hoc, Ergo
Propter Hoc Division, Fallacy of Equivocation, Fallacy of
Fallacious Example Fallacy Fallacy False Dilemma Gambler's Fallacy
Genetic Fallacy Guilt by Association Hasty Generalization
Historian's Fallacy Illicit Conversion Ignoring a Common Cause
Incomplete Evidence Middle Ground Misleading Vividness Moving the
Goal Posts Oversimplified Cause Overconfident Inference from
Unknown Statistics Pathetic Fallacy Peer Pressure Personal Attack
Poisoning the Well Positive Ad Hominem Post Hoc Proving X,
Concluding Y Psychologist's fallacy Questionable Cause
Rationalization Red Herring Reification, Fallacy of Relativist
Fallacy Slippery Slope Special Pleading Spotlight Straw Man Texas
Sharpshooter Fallacy Two Wrongs Make a Right Victim Fallacy Weak
Analogy The book contains the following three formal (deductive)
fallacies: Affirming the Consequent Denying the Antecedent
Undistributed Middle
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