How to Coach Yourself and Others Beware of Manipulation | Page 52
Fallacies include:
Formal fallacies
Formal fallacy
An error in logic that can be seen in the argument's form. All formal fallacies are specific types of non
sequiturs.
Appeal to probability
Takes something for granted because it would probably be the case (or might be the case).
Argument from fallacy
Assumes that if an argument for some conclusion is fallacious, then the conclusion itself is false.
Base rate fallacy
Making a probability judgement based on conditional probabilities, without taking into account the
effect of prior probabilities.
Conjunction fallacy
Assumption that an outcome simultaneously satisfying multiple conditions is more probable than an
outcome satisfying a single one of them.
Masked man fallacy (illicit substitution of identicals)
The substitution of identical designators in a true statement can lead to a false one.
Propositional fallacies
Propositional fallacy
An error in logic that concerns compound propositions. For a compound proposition to be true, the
truth values of its constituent parts must satisfy the relevant logical connectives which occur in it (most
commonly: , , , , ). The following fallacies involve
inferences whose correctness is not guaranteed by the behavior of those logical connectives, and hence,
which are not logically guaranteed to yield true conclusions.
Affirming a disjunct
Concluded that one disjunct of a logical disjunction must be false because the other disjunct is true; A
or B; A; therefore not B.
Affirming the consequent
The antecedent in an indicative conditional is claimed to be true because the consequent is true; if A,
then B; B, therefore A.
Denying the antecedent
The consequent in an indicative conditional is claimed to be false because the antecedent is false; if A,
then B; not A, therefore not B.
Quantification fallacies
Quantification fallacy
An error in logic where the quantifiers of the premises are in contradiction to the quantifier of the
conclusion.
Existential fallacy
An argument has a universal premise and a particular conclusion.
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