5 Matching Annotations
  1. Jun 2023
    1. Slippery Slope A slippery slope7 attempts to discredit a proposition by arguing that its acceptance will undoubtedly lead to a sequence of events, one or more of which are undesirable. Though it may be the case that the sequence of events may happen, each transition occurring with some probability, this type of argument assumes that all transitions are inevitable, all the while providing no evidence in support of that. The fallacy plays on the fears of an audience and is related to a number of other fallacies, such as the appeal to fear, the false dilemma and the argument from consequences. For example, We shouldn't allow people uncontrolled access to the Internet. The next thing you know, they will be frequenting pornographic websites and, soon enough our entire moral fabric will disintegrate and we will be reduced to animals. As is glaringly clear, no evidence is given, other than unfounded conjecture, that Internet access implies the disintegration of a society's moral fabric, while also presupposing certain things about the conduct.

      I see this all the time in rhetoric about lawmaking. "If you let kids do X, then they'll start Y and Z!" Its infuriating and has no real logical basis. It's just basic fearmongering used to get people on board with a specific agenda.

    2. Not a Cause for a Cause The fallacy assumes a cause for an event where there is no evidence that one exists. Two events may occur one after the other or together because they are correlated, by accident or due to some other unknown event; one cannot conclude that they are causally connected without evidence.

      This one is a little confusing to me, and I don't know that I see it all too often. The only good examples I can think of are like way out there conspiracy theories that like to conflate different things together. (5G towers and coronavirus I guess?)

    3. A false dilemma is an argument that presents a set of two possible categories and assumes that everything in the scope of that which is being discussed must be an element of that set. If one of those categories is rejected, then one has to accept the other. For example, In the war on fanaticism, there are no sidelines; you are either with us or with the fanatics. In reality, there is a third option, one could very well be neutral; and a fourth option, one may be against both; and even a fifth option, one may empathize with elements of both.

      I think this another common one, as people have a tendency to want to put something into boxes. To label something as good or bad, black or white. When in reality, things are usually very complicated and nuanced. Not to say that there aren't some things that are inherently good or bad, but there are more things that are shades in between than are objectively one. This also plays into the "with us or against us" mentality that can be seen in American politics today.

    4. Straw Man Intentionally caricaturing a person's argument with the aim of attacking the caricature rather than the actual argument is what is meant by “putting up a straw man.” Misrepresenting, misquoting, misconstruing and oversimplifying are all means by which one commits this fallacy. A straw man argument is usually one that is more absurd than the actual argument, making it an easier target to attack and possibly luring a person towards defending the more ridiculous argument rather than the original one. For example, My opponent is trying to convince you that we evolved from monkeys who were swinging from trees; a truly ludicrous claim. This is clearly a misrepresentation of what evolutionary biology claims, which is the idea that humans and chimpanzees shared a common ancestor several million years ago. Misrepresenting the idea is much easier than refuting the evidence for it.

      This is a phrase that I have heard a LOT. I think its a very common thing to see within certain political spheres in this moment in time. Its problematic because the person making this argument is in no way actually addressing the issues. They are just hoisting themselves up by dragging the other person or information source down. Scientific literacy and knowing how to judge the credibility of a source is important, but knowingly turning that source into a caricature to disregard their information is unhelpful.

    5. The ability to analyze arguments also helped provide a yardstick for knowing when to withdraw from discussions that would most likely be futile.

      I think regardless of the context of research paper writing, this is just solid life advice. I've definitely encountered people who I know that arguing with would be pointless. This is a common everyday problem for a lot of people.