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Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance http:// b1105.wordpress.com

Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

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Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance . http://b1105.wordpress.com. Chapter 5: Logical Fallacies--1 Assessing Relevance Determine whether the premises in the following arguments are positively relevant, negatively relevant, or irrelevant to the conclusion. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

Chapter 5Logical Fallacies I

Fallacies of Relevance

http://b1105.wordpress.com

Page 2: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Chapter 5: Logical Fallacies--1• Assessing Relevance• Determine whether the premises in the

following arguments are positively relevant, negatively relevant, or irrelevant to the conclusion.

• 1. Felix is a parrot. So Felix has feathers.• 2. Halle is fifteen-years-old. So, Halle is a

senior in high school.• 3. Figure X is a triangle. So, figure X is a

square.

Page 3: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Chapter 5: Logical Fallacies--1• Assessing Relevance• Determine whether the premises in the

following arguments are positively relevant, negatively relevant, or irrelevant to the conclusion.

• 1. Felix is a parrot. So Felix has feathers.• 2. Halle is fifteen-years-old. So, Halle is a

senior in high school.• 3. Figure X is a triangle. So, figure X is a

square.• 1. positively relevant• 2. negatively relevant• 3. negatively relevant

Page 4: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Indicate in the space provide whether the following statements are true (T) of false (F).

• ______ 1. A fallacy is an argument that contains at least one false premise.

• ______ 2. Fallacies of relevance are fallacies that occur because the premises, though logically relevant to the conclusion, fail to provide sufficient evidence for the conclusion.

• ______ 3. A statement is positively relevant to another statement if it counts in favor of that statement.

Page 5: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Indicate in the space provide whether the following statements are true (T) of false (F).

• ______ 1. A fallacy is an argument that contains at least one false premise.

• ______ 2. Fallacies of relevance are fallacies that occur because the premises, though logically relevant to the conclusion, fail to provide sufficient evidence for the conclusion.

• ______ 3. A statement is positively relevant to another statement if it counts in favor of that statement.

• 1. F• 2. F• 3. T

Page 6: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Identifying Fallacies• Identify the fallacies of relevance committed in the

following passages. If no fallacy is committed, write "no fallacy."

• 1. Gambling is wrong, because it's wrong to play at games of chance for stakes.

• 2. It would be a mistake to appoint Pete Dobson as Superintendent of Schools. Mr. Dobson has twice been convicted of child endangerment and he was recently charged with embezzlement.

• 3. In a recent issue of Stogey magazine, Julio Fumar argues that Honduran cigars are better than Cuban cigars. But Fumar's argument isn't worth the paper it's printed on. Fumar is biased against Cuba because the Castro regime imprisoned his parents.

Page 7: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Identifying Fallacies• Identify the fallacies of relevance committed in the following

passages. If no fallacy is committed, write "no fallacy."• 1. Gambling is wrong, because it's wrong to play at games

of chance for stakes.• 2. It would be a mistake to appoint Pete Dobson as

Superintendent of Schools. Mr. Dobson has twice been convicted of child endangerment and he was recently charged with embezzlement.

• 3. In a recent issue of Stogey magazine, Julio Fumar argues that Honduran cigars are better than Cuban cigars. But Fumar's argument isn't worth the paper it's printed on. Fumar is biased against Cuba because the Castro regime imprisoned his parents.

• 1. begging the question• 2. no fallacy• 3. attacking the motive

Page 8: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Chapter 6: Logical Fallacies--2• True/False• Indicate in the space provided whether the

following statements are true (T) of false (F).• ______ 1. Critical thinkers never accept a claim

on the mere say-so of another.• ______ 2. If a person accepts a claim on the

say-so of an alleged witness or authority, and there is good reason to believe that the alleged witness or authority is biased, then the person commits the fallacy of inappropriate appeal to authority.

Page 9: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• True/False• Indicate in the space provided whether the

following statements are true (T) of false (F).• ______ 1. Critical thinkers never accept a claim

on the mere say-so of another.• ______ 2. If a person accepts a claim on the

say-so of an alleged witness or authority, and there is good reason to believe that the alleged witness or authority is biased, then the person commits the fallacy of inappropriate appeal to authority.

• 1. F• 2. T

Page 10: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• ______ 4. Some claims are so inherently controversial that they cannot be settled by

appeals to expert opinion.• ______ 5. The following argument commits

the fallacy of appeal to ignorance: "No one has ever seen Billie Jenkins ride his

bike to school. So, probably Billy Jenkins rarely if ever rides his bike to school."

• ______ 6. The fallacy of false alternatives need not be explicitly expressed in "either…or" form.

Page 11: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• ______ 4. Some claims are so inherently controversial that they cannot be settled by appeals to expert opinion.

• ______ 5. The following argument commits the fallacy of appeal to ignorance: "No one has ever seen Billie Jenkins ride his bike to school. So, probably Billy Jenkins rarely if ever rides his bike to school."

• ______ 6. The fallacy of false alternatives need not be explicitly expressed in "either…or" form.

• 4. T• 5. F• 6. T

Page 12: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Identifying Fallacies• Identify the fallacies of insufficient evidence committed in

the following passages. If no fallacy is committed, write "no fallacy."

• 1. Giving half your money to charity is either morally obligatory or morally prohibited. But giving half your money to charity is not morally prohibited. In fact, it would be highly praiseworthy. Therefore, giving half your money to charity is morally obligatory.

• 2. IRS agent: Mr. Peckinsniff, there is nothing in these documents that proves that you haven't been cheating on your taxes. Therefore, I must assume that you have been cheating on your taxes.

• 3. Kids play too many video games. That's why there's so much juvenile crime today.

Page 13: Chapter 5 Logical Fallacies I Fallacies of Relevance

• Identifying Fallacies• Identify the fallacies of insufficient evidence committed in the

following passages. If no fallacy is committed, write "no fallacy."• 1. Giving half your money to charity is either morally obligatory or

morally prohibited. But giving half your money to charity is not morally prohibited. In fact, it would be highly praiseworthy. Therefore, giving half your money to charity is morally obligatory.

• 2. IRS agent: Mr. Peckinsniff, there is nothing in these documents that proves that you haven't been cheating on your taxes. Therefore, I must

assume that you have been cheating on your taxes.• 3. Kids play too many video games. That's why there's so much

juvenile crime today.• 1. false alternatives• 2. appeal to ignorance• 3. questionable cause