Question 36 (2 points)
Identify the logical fallacy:
Since he could stand to lose...
English, 06.03.2020 22:59 hiiamsuperverylong
Question 36 (2 points)
Identify the logical fallacy:
Since he could stand to lose 20 lbs. himself, Senator Stark should not be allowed to speak at the National Healthcare Forum.
Question 36 options:
false analogy
post hoc
ad hominem
bandwagon argument
Question 37 (2 points)
Identify the logical fallacy:
John Jacobs, a noted dentist and oral surgeon in the Houston area, states that “tax relief for wealthy Americans will help improve our sluggish economy.”
Question 37 options:
ad hominem
appeal to doubtful authority
slippery slope
bandwagon argument
Question 38 (2 points)
Identify the logical fallacy:
Water fluoridation affects the brain. Citywide, students’ test scores began to drop five months after the water fluoridation program began.
Question 38 options:
equivocation
post hoc
bandwagon argument
either/or reasoning
Question 39 (2 points)
Identify the logical fallacy:
I don’t know why you gave me an F for handing in someone else’s essay. Didn’t you ever copy something from someone else?
Question 39 options:
post hoc
appeal to doubtful authority
you also
either/or reasoning
Question 40 (2 points)
Identify the logical fallacy:
The sign read, “Fine for parking here,” so because it was fine, I parked there.
Question 40 options:
hasty generalization
equivocation
straw man
either/or reasoning
Answers: 1
English, 21.06.2019 19:10
Read the passage from sugar changed the world. but there is another story as well. information about sugar spread as human knowledge expanded, as great civilizations and cultures exchanged ideas. in fact, while sugar was the direct cause of the expansion of slavery, the global connections that sugar brought about also fostered the most powerful ideas of human freedom. how do the details in this passage support the authors’ purpose? the details about the expansion of sugar inform readers about how widespread the use of sugar was. the details about human knowledge inform readers about how humans learned about sugar. the details about ideas and global connections persuade readers that sugar’s story has multiple consequences. the details about the spread of information about sugar entertain readers with stories of travel.
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 00:00
And argument does not always have to be made in words. which of the following best describes the type of argument a piece of music makes
Answers: 3
English, 22.06.2019 04:00
which statement describes the main argument of truth’s speech
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 08:30
Asymbol always — a. gives human qualities to nonhuman things b. uses a connective word such as like or as c. stands both for itself and for something else d. presents an apparent contradiction that is actually true
Answers: 3
English, 27.07.2019 07:30
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Mathematics, 27.07.2019 07:30
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History, 27.07.2019 07:30