Types of Fallacy
Types of Fallacy
0,0.Introduction..................................................................................................................................2
0.2.General:.........................................................................................................................................2
0.3.Specifics:................................................................................................................................2
0.4.Methodology...............................................................................................................................2
0.5.Fallacy........................................................................................................................................4
1.1. Paradoxes
1.2.Types of paradoxes....................................................................................................................8
1.3.Conclusion
1.5.Bibliography..............................................................................................................................10
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0,0.Introduction
The present work arises in the discipline of philosophy and has the theme of fallacy.
The fallacy consists of 4 types which are: Straw man fallacy; Fallacy of the various
questions; Fallacy of the inversion of quantifiers; Gambler's fallacy.
(true). Note that it is different from the scientific principle of considering it false until proven.
what is true. And in Ignorance Appeal Occurs when someone, out of ignorance, defends
that a certain statement must be true just because there is no evidence to the contrary or, in
instead should be false just because no one has been able to prove its truth.
0.1.Objectives:
0.2.General:
Understanding the theme of fallacy and paradox
specifics
Discuss the basic concepts of fallacy
Describe the types of fallacy
Explain the paradox and its types
0.4.Methodology
For the realization and materialization of this work, several procedures were employed that
combinations allowed the coherence of the research since the selection of documents and analysis of
various bibliographic sources and finally the systematization and compilation of the final work
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0.5.Fallacy
Bankruptcy is a word of Greek origin used by the scholastics to indicate the syllogism.
Aristotle's sophist.
According to Pedro Hispano (2010), a fallacy is the suitability of making believe that it is what it is not.
Instead of the arguer proving the falsehood of the statement, he attacks the person who made it.
statement
It occurs when something is considered true simply because it has not been proven false.
(or prove that something is false by not having evidence that it is true). Note that it is different from
scientific principle of considering false until it is proven to be true.
Amphibiology
It occurs when the premises used in the argument are ambiguous due to poor formulation.
grammatical.
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Two facts occur. They are placed as similar because they are derived from or similar to a
third fact.
Naturalistic fallacy
The naturalistic fallacy is a concept created by the English philosopher George Edward Moore and
George Robert Price.
This concept reveals the mistake of thinking that a certain attribute or property is natural and has
origin in the physical aspect. An example is to assume that the good or altruism of the human being (or
Example: if we legalize the consumption of marijuana, everyone will want to try it, soon.
they will be addicted and society will turn into a bunch of drugged zombies wandering the
streets.
It happens when someone, out of ignorance, argues that a certain statement should be
true only because there is no evidence to the contrary or, instead, it must be false just because
Manuel: you are seeing the problem wrong. You are the one who has to prove to me that reincarnation does not
exists
Sofia: but you know very well that it is not possible to present such evidence
It is a type of non-functional fallacy and is an attempt to awaken the passions and enthusiasm of the
crowd, gain the support of the listening or reading public for a certain conclusion.
Example:
Of course, you want to have lunch at our restaurant, 99% of people have lunch here.
The Mozambican people want to elect me. Only you don't want to?
It consists of gaining the sympathy of the opponent by presenting oneself as a pitiful person.
Example:
We hope you accept our recommendations. We have spent the last three months ...
work miserably on this report.
the argument tries to give quality to your report based on the effort to produce it.
This fallacy aims to attack the person who made the argument. Therefore, it is considered
ad hominem, a Latin expression that means against the man.
Example:
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Note that Y does not seek the argument itself, 'gay marriage,' but goes for an aggression.
against X, calling him ignorant.
It occurs when the argument appeals to force, threats, or someone's power to coerce the
the opponent accepts the conclusion as true. This is what happens when there are no reasons and if
resorts to power, with the conclusion accepted out of fear and not out of conviction.
Example:
The name of the fallacy derives from the practice of using scarecrows in combat training. In such
In practice, a straw man represents the enemy and is created only so that it can be attacked.
1.1. Paradoxes
Paradox or oxymoron is a figure of speech characterized by the expression of an idea
contrasting and contradictory. However, if the statement presents only contrast, it is configured
in an antithesis, therefore, for the paradox to occur, it is necessary to have a
contradiction. Thus, paradoxes can be true, false, or conditional.
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1.2.Types of paradoxes
True paradox: it is one that, based on a false logical reasoning, leads to
unlikely results. As an example, we cite Hilbert's hotel paradox, which states:
even though a hotel with infinite rooms is fully booked, it can still accommodate
more hypotheses.
False paradox: it is one that, based on a false reasoning, leads to incorrect results.
As an example, the paradox of the unexpected hanging occurs in the following situation.
Imagine that, on Saturday, it is decreed that a certain prisoner will be strained in the week.
the day after noon, and that the hanging will take place on an unexpected day. The prisoner
so it concludes that his death cannot happen on the following Saturday, because in the
Friday, after noon, he will know the day of his hanging, that is Saturday, which
prevents the fact from being unexpected.
Conditional paradox: it is one that depends on the relationship between cause and consequence and generates,
Often, a problem is difficult to resolve, as one fact would cause another, which in turn
Originally that as can be seen in the question: what came first, the egg or the chicken. If the
this depends on the chicken to exist, and the chicken depends on the egg to exist, which came first
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1.3.Conclusion
It is concluded from the work that a fallacy is a reasoning that seems logical and true, however
Is there any flaw that makes him false.
The fallacy was a resource used by Aristotle, by Scholasticism, by Demagogy and serves
as a figure of speech in argumentative speeches and themes. The word has its origin in the term
in Latin 'fallacia', that which deceives or misleads. Thus, a fallacy will be something deceptive.
Fallacies are constructed by seemingly correct reasoning that leads to false conclusions.
For the most part, the fallacy is built from a very inconsistent narrative. In addition to
counter constructions extremely prejudiced. On search for create
an appropriate argumentation to conceal the truth, the fallacious content has structures
quite sensitive, although it is convincing at first glance, through a thorough analysis
it can be easily identified.
Many times the fallacy is also called a sophism, which can be understood as
a reasoning created maliciously with the aim of deceiving the listener. There are also the
paralogisms, which are false reasoning, but different from fallacies and sophisms, these are made
unintentionally. To be able to identify them, the fallacies were divided and classified into
two groups: formal and informal.
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1.5.Bibliography
GEQUE, Eduardo, Manual. Pre-university Philosophy 12 aclass 1aed, editoralongiman,
Maputo 2010.
SIMON