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TYPES OF 
FALLACIESadapted from 
S. E. Toulmin, R. Rieke, 
S. Janik.  Introduction to Reasoning. Prentice Hall, 1984.
 
 A.  MISSING GROUNDS
    
B.   
IRRELEVANT GROUNDS  (using grounds that have a special appeal to the audience) 
	
	
	evading the issue: 
	
	
	"red herring"
	
	"straw man"   
	
	
	slippery slope/extension   
	
	
	tu quoque 
	
	
	
	appeal to tradition 
	(unchallengeable authority) religion, tradition, science, etc.
	
	
	
	ad hominem (name calling, guilt by assoc,
motive)   
	
	
	ad populi (to the people)
	
	emotion/compassion -
pity, fear
	
	shifting grounds - 
	shifting the burden of
proof
	
	two wrongs...   
	
	
	ignorance (of counter
evidence)   
	   
C.  DEFECTIVE GROUNDS
     D.   
UNWARRANTED ASSUMPTIONS
  
	
	
	false cause
	
	
	post hoc ergo propter hoc
	
	single cause
	
	false analogy
	
	
	poisoned well
("COMMON SENSE tells us ..." - "INFORMED 
	voters
believe...") 
	
	
	dilemma/dichotomy
("either ‑ or")    
	
	
	composition / division   
E.  Language Fallacies  [ Fallacies in italics are not 
mentioned in the text ] |