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| A falacy in logical argumentation |
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| Capable of being believed |
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| The foundation or or basis in which a belief or action rest |
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| Refutation (counterargument) |
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| An act of refuting a statement, disproof |
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| An act of convincing another |
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| The undue use of exaggeration or display |
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| information or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person or group |
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| A plan or scheme proposed |
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| Action of conceding or yielding, as a point of an argument |
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| False instance of the argument from the analogy |
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| Appeals to the audiences emotions |
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| Reasoning from detailed facts to general principles |
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| Permits the assumption of premises of an argument |
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| Proof of a logical theorem |
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| Information proven by observation or experimentation |
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| Information that is not based on facts |
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| Arising from or appealing to the emotions and logic |
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| Characteristics from a certain kind of area |
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| A dangerous and irreversible course |
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| Make a serious or urgent request |
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| The use of successive verbal constructions in poetry or prose |
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| Prejudice in favor of or against one thing, person, or group |
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| To take any know fact and argue against it |
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| An attitude of appeal to tender emotions |
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| Logical fallacy of faulty generalization by getting an inductive generalization |
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| Post hoc, ergo proctor hoc |
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| To demand, ask for, or take as one's own |
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| The exact or direct opposite |
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| A figure of speech negating an opposite |
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| A statement made in rebutting |
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| The use of equivocal language |
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| The distinctive character, spirit, and attitudes of people |
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| Peoples news in the world |
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Definition
| The act of substituting a term for one considered offensive |
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| The use of words to tell something opposite to their literal meaning |
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| A contradictory statement that may nonetheless true |
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| The repetition of a word/phrase at the beginning of verses, clauses, or paragraphs |
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