1 / 28

the Fallacies of Rhetoric

the Fallacies of Rhetoric. Rhetorical Analysis Background Information. What is a fallacy?. Fallacy: an incorrect argument in logic and rhetoric resulting in a lack validity, or more generally, a lack of soundness

nasnan
Télécharger la présentation

the Fallacies of Rhetoric

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. the Fallacies of Rhetoric Rhetorical Analysis Background Information

  2. What is a fallacy? • Fallacy: an incorrect argument in logic and rhetoric resulting in a lack validity, or more generally, a lack of soundness • In other words, a fallacy is a strategy that someone uses in a piece of rhetoric to persuade the listener or reader, masking him or her from the real truth • We are going to be learning about 26 fallacies in preparation for your paper • THERE WILL BE A QUIZ

  3. Appeals of Prejudice or Stereotypes • Judging someone’s credibility by race, religion, sex or other categorization rather than by the facts • Example:

  4. Appeals for Sympathy • Using sympathy instead of facts to back a statement • Example:

  5. Appeals of Tradition and Custom • Justifying arguments with traditional and customary excuses rather than facts • Example:

  6. Arguing in a Circle • Circulating arguments with meaningless answers rather than resolving them • Example:

  7. Bandwagon • Everyone else is doing something, so should you! • Example:

  8. Begging the Question • Taking for granted ideas are true without proving them to be • Example:

  9. Card Stacking • Presenting only one side of an issue; one point of view in favor of or against • Example:

  10. Deduction • Generalizing the whole to specific parts • Example:

  11. Equivocation • Using two dissimilar situations and comparing them as the same to persuade • Example:

  12. Exigency • Tries to convince that there is a good reason to do something in a short amount of time. Consequences will result if too much time is taken. • Example:

  13. Flag waving • Stars and stripes or you are not patriotic • Example:

  14. Free Bargain • A technique of making someone believe they are getting something for nothing • Example:

  15. Glittering Generality • A word or phrase used to draw a positive response but to give no information • Example:

  16. Hasty Generalization • Use of magnificent or non-sufficient evidence to support a broad conclusion • Example:

  17. Induction • Believing a specific example can be generalized to a whole. • Example:

  18. Innuendo • Hints indirectly that wrongdoing is present without proof • Example: When Regina George calls a guy’s girlfriend’s mother pretending to be Planned Parenthood with test results. This implies that the woman’s daughter is pregnant.

  19. Just Plain Folks • To use blue collar and middle class values rather than the facts • Example:

  20. Name Calling • Labeling someone or something good or bad without sufficient evidence • Example:

  21. Non Sequitur • Using an inconsistent argument. “It does not follow.” • Example:

  22. Oversimplification • Easier said than done • Example:

  23. Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc • After this, therefore, because of this • Example:

  24. Repetition • Repeating statements to persuade • Example:

  25. Substitution of Prestige • Avoiding facts by thinking well of something because of clout or status • Example:

  26. Substitution of Ridicule or humor • Not using facts but making a joke or derogatory comment to discredit • Example:

  27. Testimonial • Opinion of a well known person or subject when he or she has no expertise to talk about it • Example:

  28. Value Charged Appeals • Use of highly charged emotional words to persuade • Example:

More Related