Description

Book Synopsis

A timely and accessible guide to 100 of the most infamous logical fallacies in Western philosophy, helping readers avoid and detect false assumptions and faulty reasoning

You'll love this book or you'll hate it. So, you're either with us or against us. And if you're against us then you hate books. No true intellectual would hate this book.

Ever decide to avoid a restaurant because of one bad meal? Choose a product because a celebrity endorsed it? Or ignore what a politician says because she's not a member of your party? For as long as people have been discussing, conversing, persuading, advocating, proselytizing, pontificating, or otherwise stating their case, their arguments have been vulnerable to false assumptions and faulty reasoning. Drawing upon a long history of logical falsehoods and philosophical flubs, Bad Arguments demonstrates how misguided arguments come to be, and what we can do to detect them in the rhetoric of others and avoid using

Trade Review

“…In view of the contemporary controversies surrounding many of the fundamental concepts of logic discussed, this synopsis is no mean feat, given the exacting formalities of the subject. As a helping hand to students new to critical thinking, the book is immensely successful and useful…”

--L. C. Archie, emeritus, Lander University

CHOICE April 2019



Table of Contents

Notes on Contributors xiii

Introduction 1

Part I Formal Fallacies 35

Propositional Logic 37

1 Affirming a Disjunct 39
Jason Iuliano

2 Affirming the Consequent 42
Brett Gaul

3 Denying the Antecedent 46
Brett Gaul

Categorical Logic 49

4 Exclusive Premises 51
Charlene Elsby

5 Four Terms 55
Charlene Elsby

6 Illicit Major and Minor Terms 60
Charlene Elsby

7 Undistributed Middle 63
Charlene Elsby

Part II Informal Fallacies 67

Fallacies of Relevance 69

8 Ad Hominem: Bias 71
George Wrisley

9 Ad Hominem: Circumstantial 77
George Wrisley

10 Ad Hominem: Direct 83
George Wrisley

11 Ad Hominem: Tu Quoque 88
George Wrisley

12 Adverse Consequences 94
David Vander Laan

13 Appeal to Emotion: Force or Fear 98
George Wrisley

14 Appeal to Emotion: Pity 102
George Wrisley

15 Appeal to Ignorance 106
Benjamin W. McCraw

16 Appeal to the People 112
Benjamin W. McCraw

17 Appeal to Personal Incredulity 115
Tuomas W. Manninen

18 Appeal to Ridicule 118
Gregory L. Bock

19 Appeal to Tradition 121
Nicolas Michaud

20 Argument from Fallacy 125
Christian Cotton

21 Availability Error 128
David Kyle Johnson

22 Base Rate 133
Tuomas W. Manninen

23 Burden of Proof 137
Andrew Russo

24 Countless Counterfeits 140
David Kyle Johnson

25 Diminished Responsibility 145
Tuomas W. Manninen

26 Essentializing 149
Jack Bowen

27 Galileo Gambit 152
David Kyle Johnson

28 Gambler’s Fallacy 157
Grant Sterling

29 Genetic Fallacy 160
Frank Scalambrino

30 Historian’s Fallacy 163
Heather Rivera

31 Homunculus 165
Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

32 Inappropriate Appeal to Authority 168
Nicolas Michaud

33 Irrelevant Conclusion 172
Steven Barbone

34 Kettle Logic 174
Andy Wible

35 Line Drawing 177
Alexander E. Hooke

36 Mistaking the Relevance of Proximate Causation 181
David Kyle Johnson

37 Moving the Goalposts 185
Tuomas W. Manninen

38 Mystery, Therefore Magic 189
David Kyle Johnson

39 Naturalistic Fallacy 193
Benjamin W. McCraw

40 Poisoning the Well 196
Roberto Ruiz

41 Proving Too Much 201
Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

42 Psychologist’s Fallacy 204
Frank Scalambrino

43 Red Herring 208
Heather Rivera

44 Reductio ad Hitlerum 212
Frank Scalambrino

45 Argument by Repetition 215
Leigh Kolb

46 Special Pleading 219
Dan Yim

47 Straw Man 223
Scott Aikin and John Casey

48 Sunk Cost 227
Robert Arp

49 Two Wrongs Make a Right 230
David LaRocca

50 Weak Analogy 234
Bertha Alvarez Manninen

Fallacies of Ambiguity 239

51 Accent 241
Roberto Ruiz

52 Amphiboly 246
Roberto Ruiz

53 Composition 250
Jason Waller

54 Confusing an Explanation for an Excuse 252
Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

55 Definist Fallacy 255
Christian Cotton

56 Division 259
Jason Waller

57 Equivocation 261
Bertha Alvarez Manninen

58 Etymological Fallacy 266
Leigh Kolb

59 Euphemism 270
Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

60 Hedging 273
Christian Cotton

61 If by Whiskey 277
Christian Cotton

62 Inflation of Conflict 280
Andy Wible

63 Legalistic Mistake 282
Marco Antonio Azevedo

64 Oversimplification 286
Dan Burkett

65 Proof by Verbosity 289
Phil Smolenski

66 Sorites Fallacy 293
Jack Bowen

Fallacies of Presumption 297

67 Accident 299
Steven Barbone

68 All or Nothing 301
David Kyle Johnson

69 Anthropomorphic Bias 305
David Kyle Johnson

70 Begging the Question 308
Heather Rivera

71 Chronological Snobbery 311
A.G. Holdier

72 Complex Question 314
A.G. Holdier

73 Confirmation Bias 317
David Kyle Johnson

74 Conjunction 321
Jason Iuliano

75 Constructive Nature of Perception 324
David Kyle Johnson

76 Converse Accident 330
Steven Barbone

77 Existential Fallacy 332
Frank Scalambrino

78 False Cause: Cum Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc 335
Bertha Alvarez Manninen

79 False Cause: Ignoring Common Cause 338
Bertha Alvarez Manninen

80 False Cause: Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc 342
Bertha Alvarez Manninen

81 False Dilemma 346
Jennifer Culver

82 Free Speech 348
Scott Aikin and John Casey

83 Guilt by Association 351
Leigh Kolb

84 Hasty Generalization 354
Michael J. Muniz

85 Intentional Fallacy 357
Nicolas Michaud

86 Is/Ought Fallacy 360
Mark T. Nelson

87 Masked Man 364
Charles Taliaferro

88 Middle Ground 367
Grant Sterling

89 Mind Projection 369
Charles Taliaferro

90 Moralistic Fallacy 371
Galen Foresman

91 No True Scotsman 374
Tuomas W. Manninen

92 Reification 378
Robert Sinclair

93 Representative Heuristic 382
David Kyle Johnson

94 Slippery Slope 385
Michael J. Muniz

95 Stolen Concept 388
Rory E. Kraft, Jr.

96 Subjective Validation 392
David Kyle Johnson

97 Subjectivist Fallacy 396
Frank Scalambrino

98 Suppressed Evidence 399
David Kyle Johnson

99 Unfalsifiability 403
Jack Bowen

100 Unwarranted Assumption 407
Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

Index 410

Bad Arguments

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    £13.95

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Robert Arp, Steven Barbone, Michael Bruce

    2 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Bad Arguments by Robert Arp

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 21/09/2018
      ISBN13: 9781119167907, 978-1119167907
      ISBN10: 1119167906

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A timely and accessible guide to 100 of the most infamous logical fallacies in Western philosophy, helping readers avoid and detect false assumptions and faulty reasoning

      You'll love this book or you'll hate it. So, you're either with us or against us. And if you're against us then you hate books. No true intellectual would hate this book.

      Ever decide to avoid a restaurant because of one bad meal? Choose a product because a celebrity endorsed it? Or ignore what a politician says because she's not a member of your party? For as long as people have been discussing, conversing, persuading, advocating, proselytizing, pontificating, or otherwise stating their case, their arguments have been vulnerable to false assumptions and faulty reasoning. Drawing upon a long history of logical falsehoods and philosophical flubs, Bad Arguments demonstrates how misguided arguments come to be, and what we can do to detect them in the rhetoric of others and avoid using

      Trade Review

      “…In view of the contemporary controversies surrounding many of the fundamental concepts of logic discussed, this synopsis is no mean feat, given the exacting formalities of the subject. As a helping hand to students new to critical thinking, the book is immensely successful and useful…”

      --L. C. Archie, emeritus, Lander University

      CHOICE April 2019



      Table of Contents

      Notes on Contributors xiii

      Introduction 1

      Part I Formal Fallacies 35

      Propositional Logic 37

      1 Affirming a Disjunct 39
      Jason Iuliano

      2 Affirming the Consequent 42
      Brett Gaul

      3 Denying the Antecedent 46
      Brett Gaul

      Categorical Logic 49

      4 Exclusive Premises 51
      Charlene Elsby

      5 Four Terms 55
      Charlene Elsby

      6 Illicit Major and Minor Terms 60
      Charlene Elsby

      7 Undistributed Middle 63
      Charlene Elsby

      Part II Informal Fallacies 67

      Fallacies of Relevance 69

      8 Ad Hominem: Bias 71
      George Wrisley

      9 Ad Hominem: Circumstantial 77
      George Wrisley

      10 Ad Hominem: Direct 83
      George Wrisley

      11 Ad Hominem: Tu Quoque 88
      George Wrisley

      12 Adverse Consequences 94
      David Vander Laan

      13 Appeal to Emotion: Force or Fear 98
      George Wrisley

      14 Appeal to Emotion: Pity 102
      George Wrisley

      15 Appeal to Ignorance 106
      Benjamin W. McCraw

      16 Appeal to the People 112
      Benjamin W. McCraw

      17 Appeal to Personal Incredulity 115
      Tuomas W. Manninen

      18 Appeal to Ridicule 118
      Gregory L. Bock

      19 Appeal to Tradition 121
      Nicolas Michaud

      20 Argument from Fallacy 125
      Christian Cotton

      21 Availability Error 128
      David Kyle Johnson

      22 Base Rate 133
      Tuomas W. Manninen

      23 Burden of Proof 137
      Andrew Russo

      24 Countless Counterfeits 140
      David Kyle Johnson

      25 Diminished Responsibility 145
      Tuomas W. Manninen

      26 Essentializing 149
      Jack Bowen

      27 Galileo Gambit 152
      David Kyle Johnson

      28 Gambler’s Fallacy 157
      Grant Sterling

      29 Genetic Fallacy 160
      Frank Scalambrino

      30 Historian’s Fallacy 163
      Heather Rivera

      31 Homunculus 165
      Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

      32 Inappropriate Appeal to Authority 168
      Nicolas Michaud

      33 Irrelevant Conclusion 172
      Steven Barbone

      34 Kettle Logic 174
      Andy Wible

      35 Line Drawing 177
      Alexander E. Hooke

      36 Mistaking the Relevance of Proximate Causation 181
      David Kyle Johnson

      37 Moving the Goalposts 185
      Tuomas W. Manninen

      38 Mystery, Therefore Magic 189
      David Kyle Johnson

      39 Naturalistic Fallacy 193
      Benjamin W. McCraw

      40 Poisoning the Well 196
      Roberto Ruiz

      41 Proving Too Much 201
      Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

      42 Psychologist’s Fallacy 204
      Frank Scalambrino

      43 Red Herring 208
      Heather Rivera

      44 Reductio ad Hitlerum 212
      Frank Scalambrino

      45 Argument by Repetition 215
      Leigh Kolb

      46 Special Pleading 219
      Dan Yim

      47 Straw Man 223
      Scott Aikin and John Casey

      48 Sunk Cost 227
      Robert Arp

      49 Two Wrongs Make a Right 230
      David LaRocca

      50 Weak Analogy 234
      Bertha Alvarez Manninen

      Fallacies of Ambiguity 239

      51 Accent 241
      Roberto Ruiz

      52 Amphiboly 246
      Roberto Ruiz

      53 Composition 250
      Jason Waller

      54 Confusing an Explanation for an Excuse 252
      Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

      55 Definist Fallacy 255
      Christian Cotton

      56 Division 259
      Jason Waller

      57 Equivocation 261
      Bertha Alvarez Manninen

      58 Etymological Fallacy 266
      Leigh Kolb

      59 Euphemism 270
      Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

      60 Hedging 273
      Christian Cotton

      61 If by Whiskey 277
      Christian Cotton

      62 Inflation of Conflict 280
      Andy Wible

      63 Legalistic Mistake 282
      Marco Antonio Azevedo

      64 Oversimplification 286
      Dan Burkett

      65 Proof by Verbosity 289
      Phil Smolenski

      66 Sorites Fallacy 293
      Jack Bowen

      Fallacies of Presumption 297

      67 Accident 299
      Steven Barbone

      68 All or Nothing 301
      David Kyle Johnson

      69 Anthropomorphic Bias 305
      David Kyle Johnson

      70 Begging the Question 308
      Heather Rivera

      71 Chronological Snobbery 311
      A.G. Holdier

      72 Complex Question 314
      A.G. Holdier

      73 Confirmation Bias 317
      David Kyle Johnson

      74 Conjunction 321
      Jason Iuliano

      75 Constructive Nature of Perception 324
      David Kyle Johnson

      76 Converse Accident 330
      Steven Barbone

      77 Existential Fallacy 332
      Frank Scalambrino

      78 False Cause: Cum Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc 335
      Bertha Alvarez Manninen

      79 False Cause: Ignoring Common Cause 338
      Bertha Alvarez Manninen

      80 False Cause: Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc 342
      Bertha Alvarez Manninen

      81 False Dilemma 346
      Jennifer Culver

      82 Free Speech 348
      Scott Aikin and John Casey

      83 Guilt by Association 351
      Leigh Kolb

      84 Hasty Generalization 354
      Michael J. Muniz

      85 Intentional Fallacy 357
      Nicolas Michaud

      86 Is/Ought Fallacy 360
      Mark T. Nelson

      87 Masked Man 364
      Charles Taliaferro

      88 Middle Ground 367
      Grant Sterling

      89 Mind Projection 369
      Charles Taliaferro

      90 Moralistic Fallacy 371
      Galen Foresman

      91 No True Scotsman 374
      Tuomas W. Manninen

      92 Reification 378
      Robert Sinclair

      93 Representative Heuristic 382
      David Kyle Johnson

      94 Slippery Slope 385
      Michael J. Muniz

      95 Stolen Concept 388
      Rory E. Kraft, Jr.

      96 Subjective Validation 392
      David Kyle Johnson

      97 Subjectivist Fallacy 396
      Frank Scalambrino

      98 Suppressed Evidence 399
      David Kyle Johnson

      99 Unfalsifiability 403
      Jack Bowen

      100 Unwarranted Assumption 407
      Kimberly Baltzer‐Jaray

      Index 410

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