Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Critical Thinking and Making Decisions Errors Facts Arguments Sound Arguments Are the facts TRUE? Are the facts relevant Are there sufficient facts If not true, relevant or sufficient The argument has a logical fallacy Categories of Logical Fallacies Ambiguity Circular arguments Presumption Gambler’s False cause Relevance Appeals to emotion Bandwagon Straw Man Fallacies of Ambiguity Accent Fallacy - fallacies that depend on where the stress is placed in a word or sentence Equivocation - is committed when a term is used in two or more different senses within a single argument. Fallacy of Circular Arguments The truth of A is assumed within the original premise about A. Hence A is not really proven by the argument. This may occur through a simple statement or via a more complex set of statements that go around in a circle and eventually 'prove' the original statement to be true. Another variant is: If A is not wrong, then it is right. Fallacies of Presumption Either A or B is true. If A is true, B is therefore false. C is not an option. The other person is offered a choice where rejecting one item acts as a selection of the other. Gambler’s Fallacy Chance is affected by more than random events. It can be controlled by luck, skill and specific identified events. When you hit a 'lucky' patch, you just cannot lose. When the odds are stacked against you, you have no chance. Fallacy of False Cause A causes B (without real proof that this causal relationship actually exists). This causal relationship is often claimed when there is correlation between A and B (that they vary together) or a relatively distant causal connection. Fallacies of Relevance Attack the person in some way. For example: • Attack their expertise, questioning their qualifications or experience • Criticize their physical appearance or dress • Comment on their inability to make a good argument • Point out their junior status • Attack their values as being contrary to social norms • Interpret a minor error as major • Attach them to discredited others – Personal Attacks Fallacy of Appeals to Emotion Patriotic - asserts that a certain stance is true or correct because it is somehow patriotic, and that those who disagree are unpatriotic Needs/Desire – tells the audience what it wants to hear to 'get them on side.' Love – someone tries to induce acceptance of a claim by challenging love of a person or family Anger - someone tries to induce acceptance of a claim by arousing indignation or anger Bandwagon Fallacy The bandwagon fallacy is committed by arguments that appeal to the growing popularity of an idea as a reason for accepting it as true – “Everybody is doing it.” Straw Man Arguments This fallacy includes any lame attempt to "prove" an argument by overstating, exaggerating, or oversimplifying the arguments of the opposing side. Such an approach is building a straw man argument. A straw man argument is one that misrepresents a position in order to make it appear weaker than it actually is, refutes this misrepresentation of the position, and then concludes that the real position has been refuted