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Logic and Logical Fallacies

Logic and Logical Fallacies. Critical Thinking!!. Induction. Most common type of argument Can never be 100% sure that it is true because a new piece of evidence might come along Conclusions are based on many pieces of evidence (data or facts or statistics)

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Logic and Logical Fallacies

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  1. Logic and Logical Fallacies Critical Thinking!!

  2. Induction • Most common type of argument • Can never be 100% sure that it is true because a new piece of evidence might come along • Conclusions are based on many pieces of evidence (data or facts or statistics) • Involves the inductive leap to a conclusion • Is a feature of the scientific method

  3. Deduction and deductive reasoning • You can be sure that correct deductive reasoning is guaranteed to be true • Begins with a premise that is usually scientific or legal (like the U.S. Constitution) – something which everybody agrees is true • Argues that a particular case “fits” the premise

  4. Syllogism is the form for deductive reasoning • Major premise (All people have hearts) • Minor premise (Ngoc is a person) • _______________________________ • Conclusion (Ngoc has a heart)

  5. What makes Induction wrong? • Not enough evidence (jumping to conclusions or hasty generalization) • Evidence must be true; statistics, for example, must be correct. The MATH must be correct.

  6. What makes Deduction wrong? • Major premise is wrong (All teachers love coffee) • Minor premise doesn’t fit the case (My mother hates coffee) • It’s not set up to cross-cancel

  7. Post hoc fallacy (false cause) • One assumes that because one event happened after another event, the earlier event caused the later one. • Example: Because I didn’t wear my lucky shirt, I didn’t get an A on the midterm • Example: The volcano erupted in Iceland and then the airline went bankrupt, so the volcano caused the bankruptcy.

  8. Superstitions are one type of Post hoc fallacy • I left my umbrella at home; therefore it rained. • I broke a mirror; now I just got a ticket (bad luck).

  9. Hasty generalization • By far the most common logical fallacy • Not enough evidence to support a conclusion • Example: Every paper I saw showed an A on the midterm, so everybody in the class must have gotten A’s.

  10. Slippery slope • We assume that one small action will trigger a huge negative result • If you don’t pass the next quiz, then you’ll flunk the course, and then you’ll flunk out of De Anza and then you’ll never get rich.

  11. Bandwagon, Ad populum • An argument that depends on going along with the crowd on the false assumption that a large group of people will know the truth. • Since everybody I know wants to go to Berkeley, it must be the school for me.

  12. Ad hominem • Personal attack on someone who disagrees with you, used instead of actually countering that person’s argument • My opponent can’t be trusted to be governor because he/ she has been divorced • My opponent has changed her hair style five times this month; will she change her opinions just as often?

  13. Either or fallacy • Reduces a complicated decision to only two options • It’s me or the dog. Which do you want? • You can either work at Great America or you can take math during summer school. Those are your choices.

  14. __________________? First, you’ll go out on one date with a white person and then you’ll fall in love and before you know it, you’ll have Hapa babies!

  15. _____________? • This is ________ gone wrong.

  16. ________________? • Ms. Patton shows a film clip almost every class, so she must be an expert on film.

  17. Personal attack = _________________?

  18. ______________? Every time my daughter throws a ball with her right hand, she can hit the target. However, every time she throws with her left hand, she misses. She must be right-handed. This is NOT a logical fallacy. It’s an example of one type of reasoning.

  19. ____________________? • According to the Constitution, people who live in the U.S. have freedom of speech. • Daniel and Danielle live in the U.S. • Conclusion: Daniel and Danielle have freedom of speech to promote their candidacies. • This is not a logical fallacy. It is a type of logical reasoning.

  20. ______________?

  21. _____________?

  22. ______________? • Mr. Nguyen thinks that corporations should not be regulated because of Adam Smith’s idea of the “invisible hand,” but his idea would lead entrepreneurs to cheat, lie, and steal just in order to gain wealth.

  23. __________________? • Here are some people from our class going on the class hike. Wow – those people are cool, so everybody in the class must be cool.

  24. ________________? All three of the newspapers I read AND my uncle and aunt have told me that the best candidate is Evan Low, so I am going to vote for him, too. What is the problem with this example?

  25. ________________? I washed my car last week and then it rained, so it’s clear that washing one’s car causes it to rain.

  26. __________________? • Everybody in our class is going to the Asian-American comedy club Friday night, so you should, too.

  27. ______________________? People in our class have told me that they are going to UCLA or Cal. They must be really smart.

  28. ______________? Students in our class are creative. Kevin is in our class __________________________ Kevin is creative. The above is not a logical fallacy; it is a ________.

  29. _________________? First you throw your recyclable can in the trash, then you take a fifteen-minute shower, and before you know it, the North and South Pole ice has melted and Foster City and Redwood City are under water.

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