Fallacies Presumption: No Logical Correlation
Fallacies Presumption: No Logical Correlation
Fallacies Presumption: No Logical Correlation
Ex.
I eat chocolates and got pimples.
(Chocolates Therefore are the causes of
pimples.)
Smoking causes lung cancer.
They are true because they are scientifically
proven.
3. Slippery Slope
The fallacy of slippery in slope involves an
advocated things, events or actions followed by
the consequent series of things, events or
actions arranged in a domino or stampede
effect. This series is represented in a string of if-
then statements.
Ex. If you do not go to bed early, then youll be
tired in your classes tomorrow, and then you
wont be able to get the lessons,and then you
fail the internship, and then could not graduate
from Nursing, and then youll end up as a
decent escort lady, a certified CGFNS (call girl for
night service)
4. Irrelevant Thesis (Igorantio Elinchi)
This fallacy occurs when the arguer purports to
establish one conclusion, and instead offers
evidence to prove another. There are two variations
of this fallacy: red herring and straw man.
4.1 Red Herring
The words red herring comes from the sport fox
hunting in which a dried, smoked herring, which is
red in color, is dragged across the tail of the fox to
throw the hounds off the scent. The symbolism
signifies that the red herring involves the concept
of diversion or distraction.
The fallacy is committed when the arguer diverts the
attention of the listener or reader by simply
introducing some claim that is directly irrelevant to
the original issue.
Ex.
Environmentalists have complained about the
dangers of nuclear power for quite some time.
However, electricity is dangerous no matter how
its generated. In fact, people get electrocuted
each year because of such ignorance. Its really too
bad the government wont do more to educate the
public about the dangers of electricity.
4.2 Straw man
The term straw man is synonymous to an
imaginary man. There are two persons
involved here. The first person is the proponent
who presents the original statement, and is the
one treated as imaginary man. The second
person is the opponent who presents a
destructive statement, and is one treated as
real man.
This straw man fallacy is committed when the
arguer clearly understood the position of the
proponent but looks into the weakest point of
the issue and presents a counter position that
is completely a distorted, exaggerated, or
misrepresented version of the original position.
It can be illustrated in this form:
A presents original statement X.
B substitutes X with counter statement Y
(distorted version of X).
Therefore, X is false.
Ex.
Person A: I dont think children should run into
the busy streets.
Person B. I think that it would be foolish to lock
up children all day with no fresh air.
6. Suppressed Evidence
The fallacy of suppressed evidence occurs when the
arguer intentionally omits relevant data and
eventually destroys the entire sense of the
argument. It must be understood that the
argument at first can be good and reasonable with
the premises that are true, but by lifting out an
important fact, the perspective of the argument
changes.
Ex.
My friend bought a Toyota car and it was
manufactured poorly. It has been giving him
problem until now.