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| error involves using part of the conclusion as evidence to support it |
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| This fallacy means that the conclusion has been derived from insufficient evidence |
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| The false establishment of cause-effect |
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| the incorrect assumption that two events that follow each other in time are causully related |
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| the incorrect assumption that two events that follow each other in time are causully related |
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| assumes that an issue is only two sided |
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| logical fallacy appeals to the prejudices and emotions of people |
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| an extended comparison between two otherwise unlike things |
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| suggests that readers should accept an idea or take a particular action because everyone else does it |
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| an attack on a person rather than issue |
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| Abstract concepts as reality |
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| real truths with a single position |
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| something that is added to the argument to divert attention from the issue at hand |
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| Work well with classmates |
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| a clear effective argument carefully defines terms and uses them consistently |
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