This document discusses different types of reasoning and logical fallacies. It describes inductive reasoning as reasoning from specifics to general conclusions, and deductive reasoning as reasoning from general statements to a certain conclusion. Common logical fallacies are also defined, including false dilemma, appeal to emotion, slippery slope, and hasty generalization. In total, several forms of reasoning and nine logical fallacies are examined.
2. “Reasoning is the process of creating or
generating conclusions from evidence or
premises.”
3. Types of Reasoning
Inductive Reasoning – “the
process of reasoning from specifics
to a general conclusion related to
those specifics.
Types of Inductive Reasoning:
1) Example Reasoning
2) Casual Reasoning
3) Sign Reasoning
4) Comparison Reasoning
a) Figurative
b) Literal
5) Reasoning from Authroity
4. Types of Reasoning
Cont.
Deductive Reasoning – “the
process of reasoning from general
statements to a certain and logical
conclusion related to that
conclusion.”
Three parts to Deductive
Reasoning
1) Major Premise
2) Minor Premise
3) Conclusion
These three parts form what is
called a syllogism.
5. What is a fallacy?
“A fallacy is an error in reasoning.”
“A fallacy is an argument in which the
premises given for the conclusion do not
provide the needed degree of support.”
6. Fallacy of the False
Dilemma
“The False Dilemma fallacy occurs
when an argument offers a false
range of choices and requires that
you pick one of them.”
7. Fallacy of Appeal to
Emotion
“This fallacy is committed when
someone manipulates peoples’
emotions in order to get them to
accept a clam as being true.”
Perhaps the picture on the right
would appeal to your emotions.
8. Fallacy of the Slippery
Slope
“This fallacy reduces an argument
to absurdity by extending it beyond
its reasonable limits.”
The photo on the right depicts a
slippery slope very percisley.
9. Fallacy of Hasty
Generalization
“This fallacy occurs when an
arguer bases a conclusion on too
few examples that are not
necessarily typical of the
conclusion being made. “
10. There are more fallacies discussed in our
textbook, the following I did not discuss in this
powerpoint:
Fallacy of non-sequitur
Fallacy of ad hominem
Fallacy of circular reasoning
Fallacy of Appeal to Ignorance
Bandwagon Fallacy
Post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy
Fallacy of Appeal to Pity
Straw-Man Fallacy